Posted Jul 11, 2008 at 01:39AM by Karl B.
Listed in:
News,
FPS,
RPG,
Fallout 3
Tags:
Australia,
Bethesda,
OFLC
Ó
|
As it turns out, it wasn't the guns and the violence that caused Fallout 3 (Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC) to be banned in Australia. Instead, it was the drugs. The heaps and heaps of drugs like Mentats, Jet, Buffout, and even morphine.If you've ever played a Fallout game before, you'll be pretty familiar with Mentats and the like. These items, more commonly referred to as chems, can buff players up while offering some adverse effects at the same time. Apparently, the Australian Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC) felt that the in-game representation of these drugs crossed the line. Here's an excerpt off the OFLC board report: Corresponding with the list of various "chems" are small visual representation of the drugs, these include syringes, tablets, pill bottles, a crack-type pipe and blister packs. In the Board's view these realistic visual representations of drugs and their delivery method bring the "science-fiction" drugs in line with "real-world" drugs. The use of morphine in Fallout 3 also became a point of contention for the ratings board, and, in conjunction with the usage of fictional drugs outlined above, is quite possibly what pushed the game over into banned territory: In the Board's view the drug use in particular the use of a prescribed drug, via means of selection from a menu, is related to incentives and rewards as the incentive to take the drug is to progress through the game more easily and the reward is an increase in the character's abilities and as such is Refused Classification. It's weird English, but there it is. Any edits from Bethesda to make the game more palatable for the OFLC look to be impossible too, since the use of these items are an integral part of the gameplay. The game's set in a radioactive wasteland so if you come across some irradiated ground it's only normal that you turn to some Rad-X to avoid turning green, right? Well, at least there's still the option of importing. Buy: [Fallout 3 Survival Edition (PlayStation 3)] Buy: [Fallout 3 Survival Edition (Windows)] Buy: [Fallout 3 Survival Edition (Xbox 360)] |
|
|
[Via Australian Gamer]
Permalink |
Email this |
Linking Blogs
| Digg It!
Bookmark / Find this article on: |
|
0 Comments
|
Contact Us:
|
The QJ.net Network |
|
| Site | Feed |
| QJ.NET | RSS |
| Nintendo DS | RSS |
| PlayStation 3 | RSS |
| PSP Updates | RSS |
| Wii | RSS |
| Xbox 360 | RSS |
| MMORPG | RSS |
| Personal Computer Games | RSS |
| iPhone - iPod Touch | RSS |
| QJ.NET Forums | RSS |
User Favorites - November
| Most Commented | |
| No commented articles | |
User Favorites - November
Accessories
(27)Artwork
(39)Betas, Testing
(3)Deals
(61)Demo
(63)Drivers
(4)Events
(122)Featured Articles
(24)Guides, Tips, and Tricks
(12)Hardware
(87)Humor
(23)Interviews
(528)Lore
(1)Mods
(37)News
(4241)Off Topic
(372)On Shelves This Week
(23)Opinions & Analysis
(359)Patches
(209)Previews
(125)Reviews
(22)Rumors
(169)Scans
(15)Screenshots
(584)Site News
(17)Steam
(19)Utilities
(7)Videos
(888)Windows Live
(6)XNA Studio Homebrew
(11)
Genre
Titles
Archives
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
April 2006
As it turns out, it wasn't the guns and the violence that caused 
