Sony's PlayStation 3 game,
Resistance Fall of Man has been dragged into a argument of morality and copyright with the Church of England over scenes from the game that are set in the nave of Manchester Cathedral.
The BBC quotes the Bishop of Manchester, the Rt Revd Nigel McCulloch, as stating that, "It is well known that Manchester has a gun crime problem. For a global manufacturer to re-create one of our great cathedrals with photo-realistic quality and then encourage people to have guns battles in the building is beyond belief and highly irresponsible.
"Here in Manchester we do all we can to support communities through our parish clergy. We know the reality of gun crime and the devastating effects it can have on lives. It is not a trivial matter."
He is supported by the Dean of Manchester Cathedral, The Very Revd Rogers Govender, who states,"This is an important issue. For many young people these games offer a different sort of reality and seeing guns in Manchester Cathedral is not the sort of connection we want to make."
But the issue appears also to be related to whether Sony received permission to reproduce the interior of the cathedral in the game.
The Times reports Sony Europe representative, David Wilson, as saying,"It is game-created footage, it is not video or photography. It is entertainment, like
Doctor Who or any other science fiction. It is not based on reality at all. Throughout the whole process we have sought permission where necessary."
SPOnG is currently trying to discover whether the playwright and poet T.S. Eliot received permission to set stage of Thomas Beckett in Canterbury Cathedral in his play
Murder In The Cathedral; or whether BBC itself received permission for then final scene of monster murder in 1953's
The Quatermass Experiment.
Some media outlets are also claiming that the Church of England is demanding that Sony remove its million-selling game from the shelves.
For those of have not played the post-apocalyptic
Resistance Fall Of Man, you can read our review right
here.