| | | Advertisement |  | | | |  | GameBanshee Forums
| | 
05-07-2007, 05:19 AM
|  | Member | | Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 12
| | Where are the M rated RPGs? I played this game when it first came out and it went into my library as one of the best RPGs ever made! I had my game stacked with all the mods/skins that could be found and was playing it at it's fullest. Now 3 years (?) later there still hasn't been a RPG on this level.
This thread actually started beyond me...I read an article in the newest PCGM and it just echoed what I've been thinking for a long time. Where are the M rated RPGs? I'm not just talking about M rated because of blood or gore...I'm talking about actual "mature" themes. Why can't they make more RPGs aimed towards an older crowd? Take Deus Ex:Invisible War, Fable, Gothic 2 or Vampire the masquerade:Bloodlines. All of those games dealt with "real" life situations and such. Language, sex, nudity, violence. Now this isn't a cry for a "bad boy" game or something like that. But if we can get R rated movies where are the game equivalents? Even "M" rated games are usually non "Mature"
Am I alone in thinking this? If not I'd love to hear some strike back.
Last edited by Spike45; 05-07-2007 at 07:28 AM.
| 
05-07-2007, 06:02 AM
|  | Super Moderator | | Join Date: Mar 2001 Location: The sun, the moon, and the stars.
Posts: 28,398
| | | Moving to RPGs, where this thread belongs.
__________________ To the Righteous belong the fruits of violent victory. The rest of us will have to settle for warm friends, warm lovers, and a wink from a quietly supportive universe. | 
05-07-2007, 07:23 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Frontlines
Posts: 4,610
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Spike45 This thread actually started beyond me...I read an article in the newest PCGM and it just echoed what I've been thinking for a long time. Where are the M rated RPGs? I'm not just talking about M rated because of blood or gore...I'm talking about actual "mature" themes. Why can't they make more RPGs aimed towards an older crowd? Take Deus Ex:Invisible War, Fable, Gothic 2 or this game. All of those games dealt with "real" life situations and such. Language, sex, nudity, violence. Now this isn't a cry for a "bad boy" game or something like that. But if we can get R rated movies where are the game equivalents? Even "M" rated games are usually non "Mature"
Am I alone in thinking this? If not I'd love to hear some strike back. | I'm also not too sure why. Maybe the developers in question are aiming for a much more wider market that includes the younger audience as well? Granted, I did play quite a number of games (different genres) with dark themes, atmosphere and such but I'm never a fan of those games. I'd tend to prefer games on a much lighter tone.
__________________ "I have seen the blood and dirt on their faces. I’ve seen young boys turned into soldiers. I’ve seen men ripped apart by bullets. I can’t forget these things I have seen. And so I ask myself: How much more can one man take?" -Sgt. Matt Baker
| 
05-07-2007, 09:27 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 389
| | | I think that's really all there is to it. Games are just tailored for the entire audience if at all possible. You want your agetag to be as low as possible. Something else that might be influencing the videogame industry is the moral issue though. Create a game where you can suck the life from innocent children and you'll have a certain lawyer from Florida, who I won't explicitly name *COUGH* Jack Thompson *COUGH*, on your behind. Most will want to stay on the good side of the media no matter what.
__________________
Sage plays a paladin, because other classes would be frowned upon for laying their hands on a wounded companion | 
05-07-2007, 10:00 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Frontlines
Posts: 4,610
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by AvatarOfLight Something else that might be influencing the videogame industry is the moral issue though. Create a game where you can suck the life from innocent children and you'll have a certain lawyer from Florida, who I won't explicitly name *COUGH* Jack Thompson *COUGH*, on your behind. Most will want to stay on the good side of the media no matter what. | I doubt that could be the main reason, though it might be one of the factors as well. I do know that some game developers make M-rated games without getting into trouble with the law (or even that idiot lawyer, Jack Thompson). But then again, something worth to note nonetheless.
Off-topic: As for Jack Thompson, I hope he really runs out of money so that he won't be able to throw up frivolous lawsuits and eventually, will cease to be a menace to the gaming industry. 
__________________ "I have seen the blood and dirt on their faces. I’ve seen young boys turned into soldiers. I’ve seen men ripped apart by bullets. I can’t forget these things I have seen. And so I ask myself: How much more can one man take?" -Sgt. Matt Baker
| 
05-07-2007, 10:18 AM
|  | Super Moderator | | Join Date: Nov 2000 Location: Denmark
Posts: 13,150
| | | Mainstream developers like money more then they like taking chances.
So they'll stick with what they know sells - dumped down gameplay with shiny graphics. That is why we see companies such as Bethesda doing no risk development of dumped down games and wrap it in graphics and sells it as quality thanks to PR.
Now - mature gameplay does not equal quality gameplay of course and I often steer clear of games which seems to feature nothing but "gore" for the sake of "gore" - but the symptoms are the same; it is safe and known vs. risk and chances.
A problem is also the American rating laws as I understand them - seeing as many game vendors aren't licensed to sell "M" rated games, so this further encourages developers to be "safe".
However, this is not an issue only with gamedevelopment, but all mainstream entertainment as I see it. Movies fall into clichés even more then before, having transparent and easy to spot plots and twists. | 
05-07-2007, 11:21 AM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: UK
Posts: 3,077
| | | If a movie is released with heavy violence and sex then often it finds itself under a lot of criticism, it is the same with games. Of course games, just like movies, can be mature without having insane levels of gore and sex.
The main reason, in my opinion, that games tend not to be geared towards the mature market is simply because most older gamers work, have family commitments and so on. They do not have as much time to play games as the younger generation. The main gaming audience is seen as the kids and teenagers, and so games are geared to what they are perceived to want - shiny graphics, easy to follow plots, and games that require very little thought to play.
There are more mature games on the market, but they never really seem to sell as well as the ones aimed at all ages as most mature themed games tend to be geared towards a specific minority (such as the VtM games). The profit just isn't there so companies prefer to play it safe and produce games they know will guarantee the directors and shareholders get nice big fat bonus cheques (even if the actual people that do all the work get paid hardly anything in comparison). The people that ultimately make the decisions don't care about gameplay, stories or originality - they only care about profit.
__________________ Moderator of Baldur's Gate, Fable 2, Hellgate:London, Neverwinter Nights 2, The Witcher and VtM:Redemption. | 
05-07-2007, 07:47 PM
| | Member | | Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 27
| | | I have a few ideas as to what the problem is.
Part of it is the political environment we live in. I can’t think of any other country in the world were political correctness has gotten so far out of hand. People are so hell bend on playing the part of the victim that a lot of other are looking over their shoulder every time they do something. This can quickly lead to people not saying what they think or developers not adding mature content to games to avoid getting yelled at.
Part of it is the politicians. Most of them don’t really understand games and think the people who voted for them don’t either so they use them as an easy way to score brownie points in a hopes it will help them keep their job. This leads to developers toning down the game to avoid unwanted trouble.
Part of it is cost. Publishers see what sells and want to repeat that success as much as possible. As much as I think set-ups like steam are a really bad idea they may be the best way to get mature themed games to market.
There is some hope however. Conan, the first mature MMORPG, is coming soon. Hopefully Fallout 3 will maintain the mature theme of the earlier games. Bioware says Dragon Age is their darkest and most mature themed game yet. Don’t forget about The Witcher. It is rated mature by the ESRB. Maybe if these games do well at market distributors will allow the developers they fund to follow suit.
Last edited by Trias12; 05-07-2007 at 07:49 PM.
| 
05-07-2007, 09:08 PM
|  | Member | | Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 12
| | | It isn't true that "M rated games don't sell or can't be sold" I can name two HUGE sellers right now off the top of my head...God of War or Halo 2 anyone? It isn't that M rated games aren't being sold or even that they aren't out there. It's just that M rated RPGs are very few and far between.
__________________
"Now you can tell all your friends that you died scratching my balls!"
-James Bond
-Casino Royale
| 
05-07-2007, 09:23 PM
|  | Moderator | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: UK
Posts: 3,077
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Spike45 It isn't true that "M rated games don't sell or can't be sold" I can name two HUGE sellers right now off the top of my head...God of War or Halo 2 anyone? It isn't that M rated games aren't being sold or even that they aren't out there. It's just that M rated RPGs are very few and far between. | They can be sold, but they do not typically sell as well as rpgs geared towards kids, such as Oblivion. There will always be exceptions but developers tend to go for the safer option and the most reliable market to guarantee sales is kids and teenagers simply because the more mature market tends to be harder to please, especially when it is an rpg. From reading through the threads on GB, a lot of older rpg gamers want rpgs to have better story, character development, puzzles, the ability to figure out what to do themselves and to choose what to do (ie non-linear) and so on. Yet from what I have heard and read, Oblivion is very dumbed down and is all about graphics. Why does Oblivion have such high sales compared to mature rpgs such as Bloodlines? Because the mature rpgs have a smaller market and the kids generally just want a game that looks good and is fun to play, rather than a game that absorbs you and makes you think.
__________________ Moderator of Baldur's Gate, Fable 2, Hellgate:London, Neverwinter Nights 2, The Witcher and VtM:Redemption.
Last edited by mr_sir; 05-07-2007 at 09:29 PM.
| 
05-08-2007, 06:55 PM
| | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 62
| | | I don't really mind as long as it doesn't get as bad as morrowind, where "naked" dancers in a brothel, have their parts covered in fur, and not the good kind.
you basically get some clumsy poorly skinned model moving continuously.
I think you have to be a very sad pretty badly degenerate lonely UberGeek to have that do anything to you.
I invoke rule 34. | 
05-08-2007, 07:42 PM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Frontlines
Posts: 4,610
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by JFSOCC I don't really mind as long as it doesn't get as bad as morrowind, where "naked" dancers in a brothel, have their parts covered in fur, and not the good kind. | I thought that game was rated 'T'?  I thought content like that will surely net the game an 'M' rating instead.
__________________ "I have seen the blood and dirt on their faces. I’ve seen young boys turned into soldiers. I’ve seen men ripped apart by bullets. I can’t forget these things I have seen. And so I ask myself: How much more can one man take?" -Sgt. Matt Baker
| 
05-11-2007, 12:01 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Dec 2000 Location: Soviet Canuckistan
Posts: 13,431
| | | For the record, Oblivion was rerated to M sometime ago, and still is one of the better selling "rpg's". | 
05-11-2007, 08:03 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Frontlines
Posts: 4,610
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by Aegis For the record, Oblivion was rerated to M sometime ago, and still is one of the better selling "rpg's". | I was aware of that. What I'm wondering is, why did Morrowind get the 'T' rating even though content like what JFSOCC had mentioned was present (I'm not referring to Oblivion)?  It doesn't make sense.
__________________ "I have seen the blood and dirt on their faces. I’ve seen young boys turned into soldiers. I’ve seen men ripped apart by bullets. I can’t forget these things I have seen. And so I ask myself: How much more can one man take?" -Sgt. Matt Baker
| 
05-11-2007, 10:14 AM
|  | Exalted Member | | Join Date: Dec 2000 Location: Soviet Canuckistan
Posts: 13,431
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by DesR85 I was aware of that. What I'm wondering is, why did Morrowind get the 'T' rating even though content like what JFSOCC had mentioned was present (I'm not referring to Oblivion)?  It doesn't make sense. | Because after the "hot coffee mod" scare from Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, the moral right began to really put pressure on developers and publishers, threatening costly and lengthy litigation if studios and the ESRB did not rate games more 'appropriately'. Morrowind came out before this debacle occurred, hence the lower rating.
Also, let us all be honest here, the ESRB ratings are a joke. While I support them in intent, a majority of them are misrated, often gaining a higher rating than they deserve, or being rated for something which does not exist within the game. | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Rate This Thread | Linear Mode | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | | |