Comments on: Will Apple offer ratings for iPhone games?
The president of the Entertainment Software Ratings Board says that it's a "no-brainer" for iPhone games to be rated the same way console or PC games are.
The president of the Entertainment Software Ratings Board says that it's a "no-brainer" for iPhone games to be rated the same way console or PC games are.
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honestly, game ratings (and movies) are relatively pointless anyway. if you're gonna govern what your kid can or can't do, you should take the time to see what the games are about and make the decision yourself instead of passing it on to some committee. why parents feel the need to force others to do their job for them is kinda ridiculous. However, in this case, I think its just the ESRB wants to make money off of it. I don't think there are really many parents clamoring for ratings at this point.
One thing worth noting though is that some applications, though not a game, still allow access to so called "explicit" content. Having an App Store wide rating system would make more sence. Sure you can rate games, but that doesn't stop children from using the karma sutra app that was mentioned a little while ago. Finally, an App Store wide rating system should remove some of the strict requirements by Apple so Nine Inch Nails guy won't get angry again.
Anyways, I am very excited for parental controls, not because I believe in censoring the material, but because it should allow Apple to allow all but the harshest of games through. Baby shaker might not make it, but I doubt many people would miss it.
it's about money. esrb makes a fortune off of ratings that the game industry has had to adopt in order to get retail position. if you're a small-time game developer, getting an iphone game rating from the esrb in order to go live in the store would eat at the heart of what makes the iphone platform awesome -- it puts great distribution in the hands of the little guy.
esrb would only serve to insert a middle man and take away at that efficiency. if parental and quality controls/ratings are what are necessary, then let the community help influence that -- not an arbitrary board.
I doubt that the App Store would feature ESRB branding. If Apple does have ratings, then all applications will need to be rated. As someone mentioned however, it does not make sense for iPhone developers to all of a sudden be paying hundreds for a logo. It does make sense for iPhone developers to simply volunteer the rating themselves.
- by QMT June 18, 2009 6:39 AM PDT
- I would be more concerned with the potential of a child physically destroying a $400+ iPhone, than I am concerned about that child playing an "inappropriate" game on it.
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(11 Comments)"Daddy, I dropped your phone and the screen's all black now!"
"That's okay, Billy, as long as you weren't looking at naked breasts or violent acts at the time."