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The ESRB lists a "director's cut" of the game on PC as having an AO rating, [59] but it is unknown if this was ever publicly released. A 2015 remaster of the game received an M rating with no cuts. [61] [62] [63] 2007 Manhunt 2 [35] [36] [37] PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, Wii: Rockstar Games, Take Two Interactive
Just three months ago, the ESRB felt that Manhunt 2 was so violent that it took the extraordinary step of giving a game an AO rating for violent content for only the second time in its history. We urge the ESRB to make public their rationale for changing Manhunt 2 ' s rating, including detailing any content that was removed from the game.
[75] [76] [77] Prior to the implementation of the Film Classification Act, 2005, which gave it the power to enforce ESRB ratings, the Ontario Film Review Board had used its own powers to classify the M-rated Manhunt as a film and give it a "Restricted" rating to ban its sale to those under 18.
Manhunt: Added to the Liste B in March 2004. Confiscated by the district court of Munich in 2004 for violating German Criminal Code section 131 (depictions of violence). [61] [62] Manhunt 2: Added to the Liste B in November 2008. Confiscated by the district court of Munich in 2010 for violating German Criminal Code section 131 (depictions of ...
Manhunt 2 (2007) N/A Not officially banned, but the game was never submitted to the ACB over fears that it would be refused classification. [55] N/A N/A Soldier of Fortune: Payback (2007) 2007-10-17 Banned because of high impact bloody violence. [56] A censored version was later released with an MA15+ rating, disabling the ability to mutilate ...
Re-rated to "Mature" by the ESRB after a third-party mod revealed a naked topless corpse hidden in the game's data files. While the corpse did not warrant a re-rating of the game in and of itself, upon review, the ESRB noted that the game contained much more explicit violence than had been submitted to them in the original rating submission. [118]
The Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) is a self-regulatory organization that assigns age and content ratings, enforces industry-adopted advertising guidelines, and ensures responsible online privacy principles for computer and video games and other entertainment software in countries of North America. [47]
The same rating system is used for television and motion pictures in Brazil. ESRB Canada USA: E E10+ T M AO RP: This was adopted in 1994 in the United States, most of Canada, and Mexico. The E10+ rating was first used in early 2005. Games rated RP (Rating Pending) do not yet have a rating. Legally enforced in Ontario and Manitoba. EC: Germany 0 ...