Tonight one of the Bare Platypuses took his puggles to the
local video game store. While waiting for the kids to trade in some
games (Lego Star Wars and Lego Indiana Jones if you’re wondering), your
Platypus browsed the miles of aisles of flashy box covers. A couple titles caught his eye.
The first is, from what a bit of internet research tells us, a game that’s been out since 2007 called Overlord.
[Cue Dana Carvey of Saturday
Night Live’s “Church Chat” lady voice…] Let us quote exactly from the back
jacket of the game, shall we?
Think Evil. Breed Evil. Control All!
Get in the action and become the
Overlord, the all-powerful dark lord with a horde of minions to command and a
land to conquer.
Control a horde of minions.
Slavish and loyal they’ll smash,
destroy, kill, and steal anything for you. Your word is law.
Become the Overlord.
Do you want fear, respect, gold
and power? Become the most powerful
being in the world by any means necessary.
Conquer a twisted fantasy world.
Show the Seven Heroes, demonic Halflings,
and Rabid Unicorns who’s boss.
You can read the jacket to
Overlord by clicking Disturbing Game
That game was rated “T” for Teens –
The same rating enjoyed by the other game we’ll review: The Sims. The Sims is a lot like playing with a
virtual dollhouse. Players control the
homes, jobs, accessories, and---admittedly---relationships of
their characters. When the simulated
cartoon avatars use the shower or hot tub, their “naughty bits” and bums are
pixilated lest we see ordinary figures bathing and swimming in cartoon
nakedness.If you search online but "off the grid" there are patches that users can download from third-party providers. These replace the pixilation with faux buttocks and pubic mounds. But you won’t find any ordinary nudity in the retail version of the game. And you won’t find any nudist camps in the Sims Vacation expansion pack either---a special module for the game that lets players control icons in destinations like campgrounds and the beach. Apparently EA Games is too concerned about its brand to openly offer The Sims with a nudist option. Or they fear having their game slapped with an “M” Mature rating.
Now the Platypus doesn’t believe
in censorship or banning games. So we’ll
just ask a question. If you were a parent, which would you
rather have your teenager play? A game
that’s advertised with the line “Do you want fear, respect,
gold and power? Become the most
powerful being in the world by any means necessary." Or a game that would allow Ken and Barbie Sim
and little Skipper Sim to frolic in the buff at a virtual nudist club while playing
volleyball and shuffleboard?
Don’t hold your breath waiting for
option two. If you do download the computer “hacker’s nudity patch” for your Sims,
better scan it for viruses first.
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