Nate (post: 1230372) wrote:Here's something interesting, that further makes the "M-rated games are bad" argument totally invalid.
I can play a GTA game for a week, constantly doing different things, and never once have to kill someone or commit a crime. I can drive around and listen to the radio, I can drive people places in a taxi, I can save lives with an ambulance, I can deliver pizzas on a bike, and I can even put out fires with a firetruck. Aside from a few storyline missions, you never have to kill anyone at all in GTA.
Super Mario Bros., considered to be a family-friendly game and is E-rated, forces you to kill your enemies. You can make it through the first three boards without stomping a single Goomba or Koopa, but once you hit World 1-4 you have to dump the fake Bowser into the lava pit, thus killing him.
Isn't it interesting that you don't have to kill anyone in an M-rated game, but you are forced to kill someone in an E-rated game? Which is more "evil?"
Food for thought. :p
Scarecrow wrote:First the comparison is completely unfair. They're two totally different types of games.
If you wanna screw around in GTA putting out fires or driving people around in taxis, you can but IMO it's insanely boring.
Nate (post: 1230504) wrote:Maybe this is what you meant by I couldn't compare them, because Mario is a side-scroller and that by its nature requires you to continually move right, while GTA doesn't have anything like that.
And yeah, obviously, everyone who plays GTA is going to play the storyline, they're not going to drive around for six months doing odd jobs. I was using that as an example, that you aren't REQUIRED to kill anything to play a game of GTA (storyline aside), but that you are required to kill things in older, more acceptable games.
Jaden Mental wrote:It really depends from person to person. How they react to it. Personally, I would feel much more angry after playing a bad game than if I was playing a violent one.
Haruhiko (post: 1230539) wrote:I just want to say I'm 13, I play Metal Gear Solid, and not once have I wanted to take a gun and start shooting things.
And with that, I leave this thread.
1 Samuel 16:7: wrote:
But the LORD said to Samuel, "Do not look at his appearance or at the height of his stature, because I have rejected him]Matthew 5:27-30: wrote:
You have heard that it was said, 'you shall not commit adultery']
These verses make it pretty clear that God is concerned, not only with what you actually do, but what your motives and internal desires are. Just because you are not knocking off old ladies and stealing their Caddilacs in real life, does not mean that you aren't sinning. Becuase I am not God, I do not know what your motives are, so I will not condemn you for playing MGS (in fact, I have heard that is a pretty fun game). I would encourage you, however, to ask yourself why you are playing that game.
Also, I would like to point out the last part of the above quoted verse. If your right hand makes you stumble, it is better to cut it off! By this standard, giving up a video game seems pretty tame.
Also, even if the game isn't making you sin, you need to ask yourself: "is it really worth my time?"Philippians 4:8: wrote:
Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things.
Does MGS fit the bill?
If you can play this game without sinning in your mind or real life, if you have discovered deep spiritual truths in the game (hey, it could happen) thereby considering it worth dwelling on, and you can honor God while playing it (not impossible), there is still one more thing to consider.Romans 14:13: wrote:
Therefore let us not judge one another anymore, but rather determine this--not to put an obstacle or a stumbling block in a brother's way.
Jaden Mental (post: 1230435) wrote:
It really depends from person to person. How they react to it.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:In GTA IV, you can kill practically anybody. Men, woman, children, police officers, etc.
"Do I really want endorse zero media restraint among these people?"
It may not be a stumbling block for you, but it could very easily be one for someone else.
(especially considering you are not seventeen years of age and are referencing a mature rated game).
Also, even if the game isn't making you sin, you need to ask yourself: "is it really worth my time?"
Romans 14:3-4 wrote:3 The man who eats everything must not look down on him who does not, and the man who does not eat everything must not condemn the man who does, for God has accepted him. 4 Who are you to judge someone else's servant? To his own master he stands or falls. And he will stand, for the Lord is able to make him stand.
Nate (post: 1230776) wrote:*sigh* And once again we have people who don't even PLAY the game talk about it like they're experts. There are NO CHILDREN in GTA games. There are old ladies, old men, middle-aged people, but not a single child to be found. Yes I realize you didn't know, but what's the old saying? Ignorance is no excuse? It's the same thing Jack Thompson does, saying that GTA IV has graphic depictions of sex when it doesn't.
Nate (post: 1230776) wrote:Nate's post.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:Mmmm yeah, my mistake. Nonetheless, would you not say that my counter-argument has some validity in what I'm saying?
Nate (post: 1230826) wrote:No, because then you become Jack Thompson or Fox News. "Even though this content isn't actually in the game treat it as though it is so that it makes these games seem more evil than they actually are!" It's like how the Romans said that the early Christians were cannibals and had human sacrifices. It wasn't true, but they used it to make Christianity seem terrible and something to be wiped out.
For the record, in the Mario games, you do beat up a child, in fact, you beat up lots of children (Bowser Jr. and the other seven Koopa Kids).
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1230842) wrote:I'm beginning to wonder if you even read my entire post.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:You can't disagree on the fact that the two presentations of violence in GTA and Mario are stylistically different.
Civilization is rated E and yet, the number of people I've killed over all of my Civ games is order of magnitudes more than all the other games I've played put together. So is committing genocide any more acceptable than shooting people in the face? Is Civilization a more wholesome game because we raze cities, but we're removed from the act?
Grubb, I think Nate's just trying to argue his point for the sake of being some sort of vigilante for video games.
My point, which STILL stands, is that an E-rated game forces you to kill and an M-rated game doesn't. Which is more morally reprehensible?
nate wrote:Yeah, you can kill practically anyone in the GTA games. And you will get beaten down by cops for doing so. You get PUNISHED for wanton murder in these games. Even pointing your gun at a cop, without shooting him, will immediately get you a two star wanted level. Keep killing cops and you get higher wanted stars, and eventually the FBI and national guard will come after you. You're not being rewarded for killing these cops or random people.
CONVERSELY, in a Mario game, you are constantly rewarded for killing anything that movies, with points and even 1-ups. And yeah, the turtles and Goombas can hurt you, but there's no indication that they're evil or malicious. Those turtles are just walking around. They don't come after you. Maybe they're just minding their own business, like the random people in GTA. And here you come and stomp on it and kill it and get rewarded, and enjoy it.
Which is more reprehensible? That's the point I'm making.
blkmage wrote:Let's consider a less comical example: Civilization. Civilization is rated E and yet, the number of people I've killed over all of my Civ games is order of magnitudes more than all the other games I've played put together. So is committing genocide any more acceptable than shooting people in the face? Is Civilization a more wholesome game because we raze cities, but we're removed from the act?
Nate wrote:*sigh* And once again we have people who don't even PLAY the game talk about it like they're experts. There are NO CHILDREN in GTA games. There are old ladies, old men, middle-aged people, but not a single child to be found. Yes I realize you didn't know, but what's the old saying? Ignorance is no excuse? It's the same thing Jack Thompson does, saying that GTA IV has graphic depictions of sex when it doesn't.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:In GTA IV, you can kill practically anybody. Men, woman, children, police officers, etc.
Nate wrote:The only mission I really had any problems with was one of Donald Love's missions in Liberty City Stories where you had to [spoiler] but I don't think that was a mission you had to do to advance the storyline.
Fish and Chips wrote:I am beginning to wonder if Ryan even reads Nate's entire posts.
uc pseudonym wrote:That brings me back to my original point in this post - we aren't talking about the same thing when we say a game is immoral.
*If they touch you it results in death, so I think we can safely assume they're not innocently walking around.
Why? Unless you just mean it was uncomfortable for you, how is that any morally worse from genocide in Civilization?
games with nudity (since looking at crap like that is obviously morally wrong)
Sheenar (post: 1230634) wrote:I agree with Jaden. It all depends on how much you personally can handle.
For example, Worms Armageddon is one of my favorite games--you use really cool weapons (like sheep, old ladies, the Holy Hand Grenade, etc.) to obliterate your enemies. It's cartoonish and loads of fun to play.
But then games like Doom and Half-Life are a little harder for me to handle. Sure they were fun, but I personally was scared half out of my wits playing --wondering what was going to pop up and try to kill me. It was freaky (especially in the parts of Doom where it's really dark and the parts in Half-Life where the annoying yellow creatures are attacking and I can't seem to aim well enough to kill them).
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