Article 2RKQ4 Far Cry 5's violent civil unrest is a much-needed reality check for games

Far Cry 5's violent civil unrest is a much-needed reality check for games

by
Keith Stuart
from Technology | The Guardian on (#2RKQ4)

Video game-makers usually distance products from politics. Ubisoft might help change that by rooting its new title in the fear and loathing of Trump's US

There is an all-too familiar response when video game developers are asked if their latest project has any real-world meaning: hey, we're just making a game, we're not making a statement. It's a media-trained kneejerk defence against potential controversy, a line dragged out time and time again when a producer or creative director is asked about seemingly clear parallels with genuine wars, events or issues.

Last year, for example, video game site Killscreen spoke to the makers of The Division, a game about an apocalyptic terrorist attack on New York City. When asked if 9/11 had in any way inspired the setting and narrative, associate creative director Julian Gerighty seemed aghast at the comparison - and at the connection between the game and an actual incident. "At the end of the day, it's a video game," he said. "It's an entertainment product " There's no particularly political message with it." This is a game in which soldiers are given the authority to shoot civilian looters in order to restore governmental control over a stricken city - and there's no political message?

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