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Brazil has banned many video games since 1999, mainly due to depictions of violence and cruelty, [20] making it illegal to distribute and otherwise sell these games. [21] [22] Additionally, the Brazilian advisory rating system requires that all video games be rated by the organization, where unrated video games are banned from being sold in ...
The game was briefly banned in Singapore due to the controversy. [21] While critically acclaimed overall, the ending of Mass Effect 3 was highly criticized as, among other issues, rendered all the decisions players had made in the trilogy, carried over through save files, moot, in contrast to marketing material BioWare had put forth for the ...
In 2013, the Chinese Ministry banned Battlefield 4 as they claimed it misrepresented China and was an attempt to "smears China's image". [17] Display of blood in Chinese game industry is strictly limited, if not banned. Before 2019, blood in many games cannot be red. [18] The new ban prohibits the presence of any blood. [19]
The list depicted below is of games that are either still banned, or were initially banned but have been edited exclusively for Australia. Some of these games were banned before the introduction of the R18+ category; if some of these games were to be re-rated today, they would likely receive the R18+ rating.
Bionic Commando – The game was renamed from Top Secret: The Resurrection of Hitler (ヒットラーの復活 トップシークレット, Hittorā no Fukkatsu: Toppu Shīkuretto), the character of Adolf Hitler was renamed "Master-D", the Nazis are renamed "The Badds" in-game and referred to as "The Nazzs" in the instruction manual and all swastikas were edited into a German eagle insignia.
The Darkness (video game) Dead Rising (video game) Death Race (1976 video game) Deus Ex: Human Revolution; Devil May Cry 5; Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth – Hacker's Memory; Doom (1993 video game) Dota 2; Dragon Knight II; Dragon Star Varnir; Duke Nukem 3D
Survival Island 3: Australia Story was a 2015 survival-action game created by Kristina Fedenkova of NIL Entertainment, which drew significant controversy for its portrayal of Australian Aboriginals. The game was released for the App Store and Google Play in December 2015.
A Forbidden Desert game in progress. All of the sequels continue to be cooperative board games. A sequel to Forbidden Island was released in 2013, titled Forbidden Desert. The game is situated in a desert and retains many of the same mechanics as Forbidden Island. However, there is added difficulty as well as new player roles and mechanics. [4]