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'Mature' video games and free speech
Minors might be allowed to buy "mature" or "adult" video games in more and more places. See the story about this, below. What do students think about this? What adult games are popular among students? Do stores in your area restrict game sales?


Poynter's Al Tompkins writes in Al's Morning Meeting:

A federal appeals court ruled this week that the state of Minnesota cannot restrict the sale or rental of "adults only" or "mature" video games from minors. The court ruled that video games are covered under "free speech." The Chicago Tribune reports:

Most retailers voluntarily enforce the ratings determined by the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB), a private organization. Clerks at a Game Stop store said they could be fired for providing adults-only or mature games to anyone younger than 17. One clerk said such titles prompt a computer message to check the customer's ID.

Dan Nordlund, president of the Minnesota chapter of the Entertainment Consumers Association, supports voluntary ratings but says they might need to be tweaked to make them more understandable.

The parents are the problem, not the kids, Nordlund said. He said parents will rent inappropriate games without knowing what's in them because "they want to please their kids; they want to shut them up." That's no reason for government to regulate the games, Nordlund said. "Video games fall under the First Amendment," he said. "They're a form of art."

Nordlund refers anyone concerned with the issue to gamepolitics.com.

I wonder if rental and retail stores restrict sales at all these days.
Posted at 2:26 PM on Apr. 8, 2008
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