Midway’s American Football title,
Blitz has been refused classification down under, by Australia's increasingly conservative Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC).
The game was originally set for release in Oz on February 22, but the OLFC states refused classification due to representations of both legal and illegal performance-enhancing drug use in the game.
The news follows a number of recent games banned for sale down under, including, Eidos'
Reservoir Dogs and Atari’s
Mark Ecko's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure.
The OFLC board report claims that:
"In the course of the game, the player may access what are purported to be both legal and illegal performance-enhancing drugs for the members of the team. Choosing to use these drugs (by selecting from a menu) will have both negative and positive effects on team-members, for example, by improving their speed while making them more susceptible to injury.
Each drug has different characteristics. Fake urine samples may also be acquired for avoiding positive drug tests. While the game-player can choose not to use the drugs, in the Board’s majority view there is an incentive to use them.
By using them judiciously, the player can improve the performance of the football team (while managing the negative effects) and have a better chance of winning games, thereby winning bets and climbing the league table."
In the ‘morally-upstanding’ eyes of the OFLC’s board members this falls into the realm of unacceptable content that depicts “matters of sex, drug misuse or addiction, crime, cruelty, violence or revolting or abhorrent phenomena in such a way that they offend against the standards of morality, decency and propriety generally accepted by reasonable adults.”
The OFLC can only give a videogame the maximum classification of MA15+ under Australian law. DVDs and films however can be rated up to R18+, preventing DVD or cinema ticket sales to anybody under 18.
Perhaps it’s time for this outdated law to change?