Rockstar
Games' controversial action killer game Manhunt 2 is once again facing a
sales ban in the UK.
The High Court has ruled that the Video Appeals Committee (VAC) must
re-assess its decision to overturn the
British Board of
Film Classification's (BBFC) original decision to prevent it from reaching
UK shelves.
The BBFC slammed the game
back in
June for its "unrelenting focus on brutal slaying" and "casual sadism",
making Manhunt 2 the first game to be banned in a decade. Since then the game
has gone through a repeated series of being reprieved and the banned again.
Rockstar even created a revised version of the game in an
attempt to get a rating from the BBFC.
The BBFC claims that the VAC's recent judgement is "based on an approach to
harm which is an incorrect interpretation of the Video Recordings Act".
"The Video Appeals Committee judgement, if allowed to stand, would have
fundamental implications with regard to all the Board's decisions, including
those turning on questions of unacceptable levels of violence," said the BBFC in
a statement.
The committee was ordered to reconsider its decision, which was described as
a "clear error of the law" by the High Court.
The VAC's original decision to overturn the BBFC ruling was a close run thing
with the seven panellists being split four to three about the game. This means
that the re-assessment could very easily see Manhunt 2 never reaching UK video
game stores.
Regardless, Rockstar could side-step this ruling by providing a
downloadable
version of the game, as the 1984 Video Recording Act only covers physical
media, not digital downloads.
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