Modern Warfare 2’s mature content supported by British government |
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| BY Lee Bradley Nov. 9th, 2009 | More on: |

The levels of violence in Modern Warfare 2 were discussed in Parliament today, with the British government coming out in strong support of the mature videogame content.
The issue was raised by Labour MP for Leicester East, Keith Vaz, who callenged Sion Simon, the Culture, Media and Sport minister over the release of Modern Warfare 2, saying, “Is the Minister aware that at midnight tonight a new and violent videogame called Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2 is to be released. It contains such scenes of brutality that even the manufacturers have put in warnings within the game telling people how they can skip particular scenes.”
He continued, asking, “What steps is the government proposing to take in order to ensure these violent games do not fall into the hands of children and young people? It’s not about censorship, it’s about protecting our children.”
The Culture, Media and Sport minister countered by saying, “This game the hon. gentleman refers to is a certificate 18 game. It should not be sold to children and the government’s job is to make sure that adults - clearly labelled - can get what adults should be able to, and that children are not in danger of being subjected to adult content.”
Tom Watson, Labour MP for West Bromwich East also contributed to the debate, saying, “Does the Minister agree that it would be better for this House to support the many thousands of games designers and coders and the many millions of games users, rather than collaborating with the Daily Mail to create moral panic over the use of videogames?”
On Saturday, Keith Vaz had spoken to the Daily Mail, outlining his concerns over the content, saying, “I am absolutely shocked by the level of violence in this game and am particularly concerned about how realistic the game itself looks.” He went on to promise to voice his concerns in Parliament.









November 9th, 2009
at 12:16 pm
Sion Simon FTW! Screw Keith Vaz!
November 9th, 2009
at 12:25 pm
Isn’t the responsibility in the parents of the children…not the power of the government, stop trying to restrict people and allow them to create what they want! Parent’s if you don’t want your children to see violence, don’t let them watch the news, don’t let them watch t.v., don’t allow them to play video games. Violence is apart of our world and whether they experience now or later, you can’t shelter them, perhaps instead of hiding them from it, you should teach them the importance of human life and how wonderful it truly is, teach them gun safety, teach them that killing someone is not the right decision, but in times of need it’s an act of self-defense, maybe then we would raise a world of killers and we could stop blaming a video game, a video game that only shows the reality of war.
November 9th, 2009
at 12:26 pm
I meant to say we wouldn’t raise a world of killers lol my bad!
November 9th, 2009
at 12:37 pm
“… maybe then we would raise a world of killers…” I actually lol’ed that one! :D
November 9th, 2009
at 1:46 pm
The graphics on this game are sublime I just wanted to point out. Yes I agree with Optimus Prime, governments should not babysit people. Yes this game will be incredibly violent. but that is the point you are living a war story. Parents should not allow there children to play it at a young age not because it may influence them to go kill someone, but because a child should not see that kind of violence. However it is not for the government to mandate.
November 9th, 2009
at 3:20 pm
The daily mail has a big issue with the games industry trying to scape goat it every time somthing happens by mis-reporting or giving only half an account.
That MP is just as bad and i am proud that the debate seemd to be far more mature than is the usual case on this subject. The first good thing ive seen of our governemnt in quite a while.
November 9th, 2009
at 7:42 pm
“What steps is the government proposing to take in order to ensure these violent games do not fall into the hands of children and young people? It’s not about censorship, it’s about protecting our children.”
im sorry, when did the UK adopt a communist government?
November 10th, 2009
at 9:20 am
@carg0
hes referring to ensuring the systems and guidelines in place to give ratings are run and used adequately and testing a response from the minister.
hes not talking about government intervention directly in the products distribution, thats why the
Culture, Media and Sport minister answered with that reassurance of the systems in place being adequate.
I don’t see any communist connotations
November 10th, 2009
at 1:47 pm
it’s alright if you can’t see the connotations. we’re not all perfect, lol.
November 10th, 2009
at 6:58 pm
a new violent game? thank god Kieth hasnt heard of gears of war 2…