Critics Come Out Swinging on 'Grand Theft Auto IV'
Ashley Phillips
ABC News
May 1, 2008
As fans drool over
the realistic graphics of the newest edition of "Grand
Theft Auto IV," critics have pummeled the blockbuster
video game franchise for everything from excessive
violence and sexuality to allowing drunken characters to
get behind the wheel.
Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) is the latest group
to join the fray, criticizing a sequence in the game
that allows players to drive drunk. The group has asked
the Entertainment Software Ratings Board (ESRB), which
sets the ratings for video games, to change the rating
from M for "Mature" to AO for "Adults Only." An AO
rating is generally considered a kiss of death for
games, as major electronics retailers refuse to carry
AO-rated games.
"Drunk driving is not a game and it is not a joke," MADD
said in a statement this week. "Drunk driving is a
choice, a violent crime and it is also 100 percent
preventable."
The long-awaited latest installment of the often
lambasted series has a plotline similar to past games:
Players are submerged in an urban criminal underworld
where they must shoot, rob and kill their way through
the fictional Liberty City, a near-exact replica of New
York City.
MADD is also asking Rockstar Games, the game's
developer, to consider stopping distribution. Analysts
have said they expect "Grand Theft Auto IV" to break
current video game sales records.
"We have a great deal of respect for MADD's mission, but
we believe the mature audience for 'Grand Theft Auto IV'
is more than sophisticated enough to understand the
game's content," Rockstar Games told the Associated
Press in response to MADD's request.
MADD is far from the only group that's speaking out
about the game's content.
In advance of its debut, the Chicago Transit Authority
removed "GTA IV" ads from its buses. Similarly, several
politicians, including New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg,
and parent groups that haven't even played the game have
voiced concern.
One of those groups is the Parents Television Council, a
nonpartisan education organization advocating
responsible entertainment.

