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BBQ Turtle said:reminded me of It's a Small World.
Blood, for one thing.Princess Mario said:What would want out of that Mario game?
I've said this before, and in fact I believe it was you I said it to, but I will say it again.SeproDep said:I need a T-rated Mario game. Smash Bros. just won't cut it, even if Brawl is my favorite game of all time.
I felt that, because of Mario's public image as a family-friendly IP, it would be a very bad outlook for the Mario series, and one that would be mocked for years to come unless they came up with a brilliant solution to embrace this that even the public would like. There is a reason that Sakurai of Super Smash Bros. had clarified that the characters you see are not actually the characters from those games themselves. At least, that is his description of the Miis, but I won't be surprised if this is series-wide since the games established that the characters were dolls/trophies coming to life.Leo Luster said:And? It would be fun to break down some of the boundaries the series has created and see Mario hold a realistic rifle or something similar, even if it's just for one game.
Waluigi shouldn't be considered stupid.winstein said:"Slot filler" is also lobbied against Waluigi and Daisy
I think an E10+ rating would've sufficed, as there are similar games that dealt with subjects like Majora's Mask, which was rated E10+. I don't think those themes are really dark enough for T rating.Builder Mario said:On the topic of a T-rated Mario game, I think SPM should have been rated T, or at least above E. It didn't have blood, strong language or explicitly inappropriate visuals but it dealt with heavier subjects that you might not expect from a Mario game (albeit applying humorous terminology in many cases to lighten the mood) and River Twygz Bed definitely doesn't sound like a music track from an E rated game. At the very least, I'm not sure why SPM got an E rating but Dream Team got an E10+ rating.
ESRB is messed up? Oh, you dont know the half of it.Bandana Waddle Dee said:ESRB confuses me sometimes. Like, Kirby's Return to Dream Land got slapped with an E10 despite other countries giving it an all-ages rating, while Kirby: Triple Deluxe gets away with an E despite there being two bosses that shed blood. Yikes.
Also, Brawl should have been rated E10 instead of T, Kirby 3 and 64 should have been rated E10 instead of E (Dream Collection was E10 because of them but the individual VC ones were still E). And I don't feel that Dream Team deserved E10 while Partners in Time gets away with E, despite the latter being a much darker game.
ESRB is messed up.
?HEROWALUIGI said:ESRB is messed up? Oh, you dont know the half of it.Bandana Waddle Dee said:ESRB confuses me sometimes. Like, Kirby's Return to Dream Land got slapped with an E10 despite other countries giving it an all-ages rating, while Kirby: Triple Deluxe gets away with an E despite there being two bosses that shed blood. Yikes.
Also, Brawl should have been rated E10 instead of T, Kirby 3 and 64 should have been rated E10 instead of E (Dream Collection was E10 because of them but the individual VC ones were still E). And I don't feel that Dream Team deserved E10 while Partners in Time gets away with E, despite the latter being a much darker game.
ESRB is messed up.
I still don't understand your point. You telling me I'm wrong?HEROWALUIGI said:You have NOOO idea, lets just say they are the good guys.
Bandana Waddle Dee said:ESRB confuses me sometimes. Like, Kirby's Return to Dream Land got slapped with an E10 despite other countries giving it an all-ages rating, while Kirby: Triple Deluxe gets away with an E despite there being two bosses that shed blood. Yikes.
Also, Brawl should have been rated E10 instead of T, Kirby 3 and 64 should have been rated E10 instead of E (Dream Collection was E10 because of them but the individual VC ones were still E). And I don't feel that Dream Team deserved E10 while Partners in Time gets away with E, despite the latter being a much darker game.
ESRB is messed up.
Well,you know, E and E10+ are as useful as G and PG ratings when it comes to measuring violence, as in, they're not useful at all (I read that study, some PG movies actually surpassed R movies in frequency of violent scenes, and bad language was a stronger factor than violence counts in several cases!)Bandana Waddle Dee said:ESRB confuses me sometimes. Like, Kirby's Return to Dream Land got slapped with an E10 despite other countries giving it an all-ages rating, while Kirby: Triple Deluxe gets away with an E despite there being two bosses that shed blood. Yikes.
Also, Brawl should have been rated E10 instead of T, Kirby 3 and 64 should have been rated E10 instead of E (Dream Collection was E10 because of them but the individual VC ones were still E). And I don't feel that Dream Team deserved E10 while Partners in Time gets away with E, despite the latter being a much darker game.
ESRB is messed up.
The results of this study reflect the controversy surrounding the CARA rating system and demonstrate its failure to identify clearly violent content in American films. At first glance, it seems that the ratings system makes clearcut distinctions between PG-, PG-13, and R-rated films with respect to violence, as R films contained more acts of violence than either PG or PG-13. These figures demonstrate that films with a more restrictive rating contained, on average, more violence as well as higher levels of seriousness. However, these basic distributions mask the inconsistencies in the application of its system. For instance, although the average number of violent bodily actions in a PG-13 film was 20, 6 PG films (20% of all PG films) exceeded the PG-13 average. In addition, 3 (10%) of the PG films had more acts of violence than the average for R films (32 per film). Such an overlap in the number of violent acts per rating proves that the ratings system is not consistent in its segmentation of categories. The most striking finding was that more than one quarter of the violence in each of the 3 rating categories was of lethal magnitude (highly serious). On the basis of this result, we believe that CARA has failed to adhere to its definitions of the PG and PG-13 ratings, which state, horror and violence do not exceed moderate levels and rough or persistent violence is absent, respectively.
In terms of the content descriptors, we found numerous glaring contradictions that were also identified in a recent study by Thompson and Yokota.14 For instance, when objectionable language was identified as the primary factor (which it most often was in PG and PG-13 films), violence levels were as high as those rated for violence. In addition, it was surprising to find that 5 PG films that were rated primarily for language had ≥14 violent acts. Likewise, in the R category, several films that were rated principally for language were saturated with violence. We understand this to mean that for the CARA rating board, transgressions of the norms governing speech decorum are more offensive than violence.