Video Game Ratings Enforcement Act Editorial

PC Gamer US takes a look at the exhumed Video Games Ratings Enforcement Act and takes the level-headed stance that this bill actually makes a modicum of sense.
Representatives Lee Terry (R-NE) and Jim Matheson (D-UT) have exhumed the corpse of a bill called the Video Games Ratings Enforcement Act - first introduced in 2006 - into the House of Representatives that would require retailers to check identification when selling M-rated games, and fine them $5,000 if they get busted selling M-rated games to the little ones.

Predictably, gamers cum constitutional scholars are up in arms, outraged at this assault on the United States Constitution. But it's time to rethink the opposition to bills like these. Yes, they've been challenged one after another in court and all failed, but that's because previous bills have attempted to define the contours of what is and is not acceptable content for minors to view, and none of these attempts have passed muster with the courts.

This bill, on the other hand, doesn't attempt to make any such definition; in fact, it merely endorses the validity of the ESRB's own industry-accepted rating system, and asks retailers to take some responsibility in order to make sure that M-rated games aren't made available to children.

The Entertainment Software Association has come out swinging against the bill, claiming that (empowering parents, not enacting unconstitutional legislation, is the best way to control the games children play.) The ESA does not say why it believes this bill to be unconstitutional, or even why it might be bad legislation, other than it has the potential to cut into sales.

Let's get one thing straight: The bill does not make it a crime for a 15 year-old to play Grand Theft Auto IV. It merely insists that retailers make a reasonable effort to keep her from buying it, just as they would prevent her from buying an issue of Hustler, if she was into that sort of thing. If Hortense feels like slithering around in a ghillie suit in Call of Duty 4, she can ask her Dad to buy it for her. And the fact that he has to buy the game for her might give him pause; it trips a kind of mental alarm that a pathetically abstract rating ((Titles rated Mature have content that may be suitable for persons 17 years and older)) does not. He'll take a closer look at the game and make an informed decision based on the ESRB rating.
Sounds reasonable to me.