Japanese game industry moves to restrict sales to minors
Voluntary retailer program to separate mature games from all-ages games hopes to stem government-imposed controls.
TOKYO--As the Hot Coffee controversy percolates across the Pacific, the Japanese gaming industry has announced plans to restrict the sale of games for mature audiences to people under the age of 18.
Under a new plan outlined by the Computer Entertainment Supplier's Association (CESA), Japan's main games lobby, games rated as "Over 18" by the Computer Entertainment Rating Organization (CERO) will not be sold to minors. However, the games can be sold to minors if a consenting parent or guardian accompanies them. To strengthen the consumer's awareness of the CERO rating system, CESA will ask retailers to post rating information in their shops. Retailers will also be requested to separate mature-themed games from all-ages games on shelves.
Cooperation in the program is entirely voluntary, and there have been no announced penalties for stores that continue to sell "Over 18" titles to minors. But CESA distribution committee chief and Koei president Kiyoshi Komatsu was optimistic about the plan's effectiveness. "These self-regulation proposals have been accepted by 95 percent of retailers at the current time. That includes not only game stores, but electronic shops and convenience stores as well," Komatsu said.
The policy is expected to launch in the next few weeks. Its implementation period will differ between retailers, depending on a store's size and format.
The industry is also looking at other avenues of self-imposed control to keep games out of the wrong hands. These include more activities on the part of CESA to make the CERO rating system widely acknowledged by the public, such as making CERO labels on game packages more visible. The organization also plans to send notices about its self-imposed restrictions to government agencies, which have recently blamed violent games for negatively affecting youth.
"We plan to extensively do whatever we can in order not to give the impression that 'video games are a bad influence,'" commented CESA executive director and Square Enix president Youichi Wada. "We hope to do this in order gain the trust and relief of users and the government, rather than as a measure against the government."
The industry's self-control is seen as a move to deter the Japanese government from imposing regulations on the industry. The move comes on the heels of Kanagawa prefecture's decision to ban the sale of Grand Theft Auto III to minors as a "harmful publication." The ban has led other prefectures to consider taking similar steps for violent games. Osaka prefecture will address whether it will impose an age-limit restriction in September. Ishikawa and Saitama prefectures are planning to regulate sales of violent games as well.
In February, a 17-year-old boy was arrested for killing one teacher and stabbing three others in his former elementary school. The boy was later found out to be a hardcore gamer and fan of the Resident Evil series who wanted to work in the gaming industry. More recently, a 15-year-old boy, who murdered his parents and blew up their Tokyo apartment with homemade explosives, was linked in the media to Grand Theft Auto III.
Hot Stories
Newsmakers
-
Carmack on ZeniMax, Apple, and new 'triple-A' game
Q&A: id Software's technical guru explains shock buyout by Bethesda parent, talks about new project, and doubts the Mac-maker will enter the console wars; new wave of iPhone games explained in detail. Full Story
- Posted Jun 26, 2009 12:23 pm PT
- 169 Comments
-
Crosshairs Interview: Remedy Ent. on Alan Wake
We chat with lead writer Sam Lake at E3 2009 about Alan Wake. Full Story
- Posted Jun 29, 2009 1:04 am PT
Featured Stories
-
Starcraft II jettisons LAN support
Blizzard confirms anticipated sci-fi RTS will skip local multiplayer due to piracy, quality concerns. Full Story
- Posted Jun 30, 2009 11:45 am PT
- 939 Comments
-
28% of all console gamers now female - Study
Industry-tracking NPD Group reveals women flocking to Wii, hardcore gaming on decline, online gaming stagnate. Full Story
- Posted Jun 29, 2009 4:45 pm PT
- 504 Comments
-
Shippin' Out June 28-July 4: Call of Juarez prequel, Harry Potter
Ubisoft's Western shooter and J.K. Rowling's boy-wizard lead this week's retail charge along with Mega Man Star Force 3, Worms 2: Armageddon, The Punisher: No Mercy, Ice Age film game. Full Story
- Posted Jun 29, 2009 8:22 am PT
- 66 Comments
-
Obsidian, Sega confirm Aliens RPG 'no longer in development'
Developer breaks silence, confirms all work has ceased on sci-fi film-inspired role-playing project; publisher says there are "no plans to move forward" with the game. Full Story
- Posted Jun 26, 2009 4:31 pm PT
- 151 Comments
-
THQ reveals controller-based game for 2010
UFC publisher reveals first peripheral-specific title, claiming it will have a "competitive advantage" by being "different from anything else." Full Story
- Posted Jun 26, 2009 2:17 pm PT
- 145 Comments
Related Game
- Rockstar Games
- DMA Design
- Modern Action Adventure
- Release: Oct 22, 2001 »
- ESRB: Mature
Related Games
Recent News
Site Blogs
-
Battlestations: Pacific DLC deploying in July
Battlestations: Pacific won the battle against critics when it debuted on the Xbox 360 and PC in May. And while it has yet to be seen...




0 Comments