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Do video games make children violent?

David Becker CNET News.com

Published: 24 Feb 2005 12:10 GMT

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A key sequence in "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" requires the player to steal a police SWAT team tank, machine gun rival gang members and incinerate employees of a rival crack dealer -- all acts covered by the "Mature" rating prominently displayed on each copy of the video game.

That rating, however, hasn't stopped countless underage players from picking up virtual Uzis in the latest GTA instalment, the top-selling video game of 2004. Certain advocacy groups say exposure to such material makes kids more aggressive and desensitises them to real-world violence, an argument that's winning increasing support from lawmakers in the United States looking to ban the sale of such games to children.

The issue is become a political football, with lawmakers and advocacy groups arguing that the government must protect children if the game industry can't or won't. The debate only gets more confusing with publicity surrounding cases such as that of Devin Thompson, an Alabama teen who claims that a previous version of "Grand Theft Auto" inspired him to kill three police officers when he was 16.

The families of two of the slain officers sued "Grand Theft Auto" publisher Take-Two Interactive Software and several other parties last week, claiming the game "trained and motivated" Thompson to pull the trigger. Thompson reportedly told police, "Life is a video game. You've got to die sometime," before he opened fire.

Legislatures in at least six American states are considering new proposals that would make it a crime to sell mature games to children, despite the failure of previous legislation to pass judicial scrutiny. Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich, a Democrat, lobbied for his version in a recent State of the State address, in which he equated violent games with pornography, liquor and cigarettes. "We shouldn't allow them [children] to go to stores and buy video games that teach them to do the very things we put people in jail for," he said. "Buying these games should be up to parents -- not kids."

And San Francisco Assemblyman Leland Yee, also a Democrat, introduced a new bill in Sacramento last week that seeks to impose a fine of up to $1,000 on individuals who sell violent video games to anyone under 17 years of age.

Game publishers say they already have a ratings system that gives parents all the information they need while allowing game makers to exercise their free-speech rights.

"I have a 14-year-old son, and it's part of my job as a parent to find out what's in a certain movie or TV program or game," said Gail Markels, senior vice-president and general counsel for game industry trade group Entertainment Software Association. "I don't need a law being passed that mandates that."

Thompson, the teen who inspired the lawsuit against Take-Two, got hold of "Grand Theft Auto" well before the recommended age of 17 prominently displayed on the game as part of a ratings system the game industry set up in 1994 to address concerns about increasingly realistic depictions of violence and other objectionable content in games. The Entertainment Software Ratings Board (ESRB) assigns each game submitted to it a suitability rating -- ranging from "E" for "everyone" to "A" for "adult -- with additional details on why the game received its rating. The list for "GTA: San Andreas" includes: "blood and gore", "intense violence", "use of drugs" and "strong sexual content".

Most retailers, including the chain stores that account for the bulk of game sales, say they restrict sales based on the ratings. A 14-year-old who wants the "Mature"-rated "GTA: San Andreas", for example, presumably would need a parent to buy it for them.

But enforcement of policies varies widely. New York City Councilman Eric Gioia said that in his own recent investigation of New York stores, he found no significant barriers to pre-teens buying M-rated games.

Adrian Fenty, a member of the Washington DC City Council who recently introduced legislation that would ban the sale of violent and sexually explicit games to minors, said the game industry's current rating system doesn't go far enough.

"It's a rating system without any penalties," Fenty said. "It's like any other law that doesn't have any teeth -- it just doesn't accomplish what it's supposed to."

The ESA's Markels said that while her organisation and the ESRB continue to educate retailers on the proper application of game ratings, independent surveys show they're already about as effective as movie theatre owners in preventing kids from sneaking into R-rated movies. "The last survey found enforcement was at a 66 percent level, about the same level as theatre owners' enforcement," she said. "I think the fact we're up to that level in such a short period of time indicates we're taking this very seriously."

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132 out of 298 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

49 comments

  1. No!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!... lewis schofile
  2. No !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I have played... joe bacthelor
  3. I have a WAY WAY better place to put the game... Matt Vandermolen
  4. Turkey GObbles Taco & Burrito
  5. violent games are the one thing that stops me... Philip
  6. DON'T DO DRUGS!! THEY KILL NOT SUICIDAL
  7. I think it should be 16. Matt Rowe
  8. i hate the grand theft auto games even tho i never... Anonymous
  9. This ban thing is bull crap. Mostly all that stuff... Brandon
  10. I dont think that it is the video games that... Anonymous
  11. Video games don't kill people. If kids kill t... Gerett Diamond
  12. You are right! in colombine the kids were dis... james eblin
  13. Q: Do video games make children violent? A: you be... samuel
  14. I think it is pathetic that you blame video games... Anonymous
  15. Drugs kill not video games Anonymous
  16. Violent video games make children for violent... Anonymous
  17. I could not agree more with those posts about bad... Anonymous
  18. NO!!!! Kids just say that to get themselves out of... Joey
  19. Absolute crap. Video games are used as an excuse f... NJ
  20. i am 13 yrs old and my parents wont let me bu... anonymous
  21. Games do NOT make children violent. Sure it causes... Kelsey
  22. Video games are made for entertainment. Peop... Chris
  23. jeebus.....some people are wack.....make that a lo... Hwarang
  24. Dear to all the idiots that believe that vide... Christie
  25. Video games don't make children violent. I have be... Ryan
  26. we are doin a debate. and we are on the side... Anonymous
  27. i think its bull shit lilt
  28. NO, VIDEO GAMES DON'T MAKE KIDS VIOLENT. All you p... Mike Jones
  29. Personally, idk wtf you guys are trying to ac... the plague
  30. ITS SILLY TO BLAM GTA because its the parnents fua... Anonymous
  31. NoOOOoOOo! iam 15 and i have been playing 18 rate... Carl
  32. i doing a debate and i need information plz mail m... the lil guy
  33. I think that some games are cool but if your under... TASHA
  34. no at lest not me I play violent video games but i... Anonymous
  35. If the stores that sell the video games just hand... Anonymous
  36. All these people who say they dont make children v... Anonymous
  37. YES!!!!! To the majority of responsible adults out... TO ALL GAMING IDIOTS
  38. MY NAME IS ADAM I THINK THAT SCREEN BASED MEDIA DO... Anonymous
  39. I agree with these comments. These 'lawmakers... Anonymous
  40. I think that playing any type of video games, watc... emily
  41. Video games do not promt kids to be violent.... THE T-MAN
  42. VIDEO GAMES DO NOT CAUSE PEOPLE TO ACT VIOLENT, IF... HOMER-2006
  43. I don't feel like these things need to be enforced... Sam Webb
  44. If it wasn't for violent games, I'd kill you all. Josh
  45. Video games bad? I don't think so! I've been playi... JM
  46. It is not video games that are bad. If you don't w... james eblin
  47. No, Video games don't make children violent. If th... James Waller
  48. in this whole article all the points against vgame... marshall shannon
  49. Rick James agrees with you Mike Jones RickJames

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