Tue Oct 17, 2006 3:04PM EDT
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It's not yet available, but Bully, a new video game from Rockstar Games (the U.S. distributor is Take 2, the same folks who brought you Grand Theft Auto) is causing uproar. The animated game, set at the fictitious Bullworth Academy, features a protagonist who is bullied, faces mean teachers, and encounters the nastiness of clubs and cliques. There is no beating them without joining them in this game set in a bully or be bullied world.
GameSpot, a gaming destination, reports that the Britain-based Bullying Online, an organization devoted to ending "bullying" on school grounds in the U.K., is seeking to have the game banned in the country. According to a BBC report, Bully will change the name of the U.K. release to the less offensive Canis Canem Edit (Dog Eat Dog). It is due for release on the PlayStation 2 on October 27.
Here in the U.S., members of the Washington D.C. based youth group Peaceoholics protested outside Rockstar Games' New York offices. And a Florida attorney, Jack Thompson, has sued to have the game removed from stores. In the US, the game has no rating yet because it hasn't shipped, but it's expected to receive an M for mature (over 17) audiences from the ESRB.
I watched the trailer for the game on GameSpot, and clearly it's a game about bullying that's similar in style and action to Grand Theft Auto. But this game is like your worst high school nightmare, with everything from wedgies, mean girls, and teases, to nasty cheerleaders and catty cliques. As the protagonist, you need to get strong fast as you rise through the challenges of girls that hit; mean, spiteful teachers; and gang plots to make your life miserable.
There are those who think that a game that makes "play" out of bullying is despicable. But in fairness it should be pointed out that this is not a shoot ‘em up game, and there are no guns or blood. Some experts believe it can be a healthy outlet for kids to get these sorts of fantasies out of their systems on the screen and not in the real world. On the other hand, the game shows that to survive the bully culture you need to become one.
What do you think? Will kids know that Bully is a game? Can they find it amusing and keep it in stride? Or do they learn that bullying is acceptable, fun, and even cool behavior? Would you let your teens play Bully?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
it a good game
have you played the game?? i thought of the same thing as you, i didn't buy the game till 2 weeks ago, i thought it was stupid and kids will just waste there time on it, but even though its a lot of fighting i really like this game. really you just have to trust the kids playing it, if they start fighting because of it then take the game away and ban them from there PS2, Xbox whatever. if parents feel like this game should be banned then just don't buy it for your kids.
I think bully is a bad game for children under 13 for bullying sex and alchohol
I have played the game but I'm 30 and it is good to play
I hope they make a Bully 2
To start off with, i have the game Bully, and i must find that when people are saying thats its appropriate and whatever, there speaking aload of bull!! This hardly has any violence and rude content and the whole point about the game is too stop Bullies, not be 1!! This game has to be one of the best games i ever played and i am soooooo peed off, that people critisize it and make stupid things up!
I like the because i like the music and it relates to me because i'm in school and it makes we want to do some of this stuff.
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2766 Posted by debragreeff on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:40PM EDT Report Abuse
According to the article, the game will be given an age rating that is available only to students nearly ready to graduate from high school. It would seem that the interest in this game would be from a younger group that is in the thick of the perils of junior high and high school. If the game is actually played like the articles leads us to believe, it sounds more dangerous for school-age youth to be exposed to than shooting and bloody violence, because this is what they are living and possibly enduring a bully's attacks. Teaching teens to become bullies themselves is not the answer.