
The new version of "Medal Of Honor" will allow players to play as the Taliban in multiplayer gaming. "It's a game," explained the title's producer.
"Watching virtual coalition troops gunned down by insurgents in the ruins of Kabul, I felt more than a little weird, especially since a friend lost his brother in Afghanistan only a few weeks ago. This is a real war that is happening right now, real blood is being shed, and simulating that for fragfest fun while being rewarded for kill streaks. ... Well, there's just something a bit icky about that.But Joseph Olin, president of the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences, argues that depictions of war shouldn't be pretty to start with. He also feels that a role of the arts in wartime should be facilitating empathy for the enemy. He told AOL News:
"In all combat simulations that we've entertained ourselves with, from pen and paper to movies and literature, you've always been able to experience combat from the enemy's perspective. That's always been a draw about some of the best films that have been done about World War II."At the end of the day, "It's a game," the title's producer, Patrick Liu, told PSM3 magazine, adding that DICA and EA had no intention of provoking a reaction. American Legion spokesman Marty Callaghan seemed to agree about the place the new "Medal of Honor" has in political discourse.
"The content of video games is not a concern of the American Legion. We are concerned with the real world, and the troops who are fighting overseas, and the veterans who have served their countries with honors. We're concerned with that reality."Game Developers have tread dangerous waters before when Konami planned to publish "Six Days in Fallujah," a planned Iraq war game that the company claimed was even developed with input from insurgents. That game, however, was ultimately scrapped due to political considerations. Video above: Ultra-Realistic modern warfare game features awaiting orders, repairing trucks. From (http://www.theonion.com/video/ultrarealistic-modern-warfare-game-features-awaiti,14382). See also: Ea O Ka Aina: Military Welcomes Students 7/19/10 Ea O Ka Aina: Globalized Free Fire Zone 6/27/10
1 comment :
a little too real and too scary for a 'game' i think. I hate to think of Muslims in Afghanistan buying this game to practice killing our guys
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