Mind Quiz pulled from shelves

Brain-training game whisked out of stores after mother of handicapped child complains about offensive content.

Ubisoft's Mind Quiz was pulled from shelves today after a mother of a child with cerebral palsy complained about the game calling her a "spastic" when she didn't score well, reports the BBC.

The mother, whose name was only given as Nicola, told the BBC that she had been playing the game as a way to pass the time during a recuperation period in hospital following the birth of her second son, Austin. Nicola said that she had recently lost her first son, Logan, who suffered from cerebral palsy and was brain damaged, to pneumonia.

The woman said, "I thought it was absolutely appalling that a word like this should be used to describe someone who has not achieved very well. My daddy also has cerebral palsy and he is in his mid-50s and this is a word that really offends my dad."

While the word isn't quite so incindiary in the US, it is generally considered highly offensive in the UK. Ubisoft, the publishers of the game, confirmed to GameSpot that immediately after it was made aware of the complaint, production of Mind Quiz was stopped and the game was being pulled from shelves. A Ubisoft spokesperson told GameSpot, "Ubisoft sincerely apologises to anyone who has been offended by the game. ... The game was developed in Japan, and we unfortunately did not pick up on the offending word in our quality assurance. We are currently working with the developer to find a way to rectify the issue."

Mind Quiz, released in the UK for the PlayStation Portable and Nintendo DS, is one in a series of many titles in the popular "brain training" genre, the first of which was Dr Kawashima's Brain Training: How Old Is Your Brain? (Brain Age in the US) in 2006. The genre tasks gamers to reduce their Brain Age by undertaking a series of arithmetic and other mental exercises, including sudoku puzzles.

420 Comments

  • ChicaQueenWarGa

    Posted Mar 16, 2009 10:41 am PT

    I see a lot of thumbs up for those who support this article, and a lot of thumbs down on those who are against.
    Thumbs up and down shouldn't be based on opinion...

    I'm sure this lady had much more worse situations than this. She probably only wanted the law suit money.

  • Timex2020

    Posted Jul 16, 2007 10:17 am PT

    Lady, get over yourself. Just because you suck at taking quizzes and the game tells you that you fail at life, doesn't mean jack. The son wasn't the one playing the game!!!!! I guess then if someone fails a test in school, they could cry foul play and get the test wiped from their records. Wow, I thought that the US was bad, but UK is even worse.

  • LeCage

    Posted Jul 8, 2007 11:51 am PT

    Too right they pulled it. Stupid idiots, what kind of quality testers have they got? Apes?

  • DrKill09

    Posted Jul 3, 2007 12:56 pm PT

    OMFG, they pull a game, AN E rated game for one word. Do the whiners not understand they are wasting a ton of the comany's money and time over this?! A word kids call each other on the playground? The one character in Road Rash Jailbreak was NAMED Spaz. I didn't hear them complain about that! I say just slap a T rating on it, and keep in on the shelves.

    People need to quit taking everything so seriously! If we allow this censorship to continue, it will be like the "Non-offensive Christmas play" they had on South Park. DO YOU REALLY WANT THAT?!

  • kaedahewson

    Posted Jul 3, 2007 3:45 am PT

    Ok so obviously some people here are a little ignorant and don't really understand why the word is so offensive ESPECIALLY to someone like Nicola.

    In Britain kids and adults with disabilities such as Cerebral Palsy, Autism and various others were looked at as second class citizens when really its all part of some genetic fluke. They couldn't get good jobs, couldn't get into good schools and were generally the biggest outcasts and most discriminated people in the country.

    In order to unite them all a society was formed known as the "Spastic Society" within a few years however the society had disbanded because its name had become an insult used against the very people it was set up to unite and protect. That was 20 years ago and it is still a highly offensive term and a very sensitive issue here in the UK - people who say they use it all the time are usually 14 or 15 year olds who don't know the story behind the word and quite how offensive a term it is.

    I'm not surprised it has been pulled as while it is not likely to offend as many people, and admittedly is not as volatile a word, it is a word that is similar in its discriminatory meaning to that word that begins with N that will probably get me banned forever if I say it... you know the one

  • Darkside2501

    Posted Jul 3, 2007 2:19 am PT

    People are taking this to far. Boo-hoo, the game called her a bad name. Big deal.

  • firebirdboi06

    Posted Jul 3, 2007 1:52 am PT

    Sooo... then Ubisoft didn't look at the entire game before it went to the factory? If that had been done then perhaps a modified PAL version of the game would have been created too root out the word.

  • stziggy

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 6:17 pm PT

    I can think of quite a few better names to call Nicola. Way to cave Ubisoft!!!!!!

  • Nintendo_Man

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 6:16 pm PT

    Good on her complaining, i too would not like to be called spastic if i don't do well on a game. I also think the word stupid should also be removed if it is directed at a gamer.

    You must think about this in the perspective of the general public, it gives video games a bad image and can only lead to parents, stopping to buy games for their children which hurts sales.

    It may not offend you but it is up to the game developer to make sure things like this should not happen. But if i saw that in a game, i am not sure how that would not strike me as bizarre when reading it, i think they need new quality assurance people.

  • el_chupacabras

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 3:17 pm PT

    Feelings shmeelings! People over react to every darn little thing. If you find something you don't like... you don't do it anymore. Why go around and make a huge ruckus for something so minute. Yeah... so she has had a little suffering in the past and it is a bit hurtful. I fear for what the video game industry may have to endure... somebody will get offended about something. People need to learn to just get over it.

  • MatthewNintendo

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 12:15 pm PT

    I'm seriously shocked by how insensitive people are after reading more of the comments. I'm very impressed by the action ubisoft has taken, it won't take long for the changes to be made anyway. People who are saying "laugh it of silly woman it's only a joke" or similar, imagine losing your child to a disability and then getting branded as that by a game assessing your brian power. It would make you feel aweful. Please think before you all comment.

  • MatthewNintendo

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 12:03 pm PT

    I don't think people commenting should be so harsh to this lady. It seems she had been going through a very difficult time in her life and a lot of the problems involved disabilities. The last thing she needed was to be called a spastic, which I can imagine would be hurtful, since I live in the UK and it is said by people without any regard to people's feelings.

  • minos30

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 11:58 am PT

    gaming as a global thing, companies should put more attention towards they're putting out.

  • 9344891

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 11:53 am PT

    Spastic is not very offensive and it is in the uk because i live there and use spastic all the time.

  • Pookis2006

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 11:52 am PT

    She took it too far i think, but meh. Also, i'd love a game where you get to kill upper class americans who dont give anything back to the community or donate to charity,or move to help the millions suffering elsewhere in the world. it would be sweet.

  • desolatordan

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 10:40 am PT

    Well, boohoo. What a way to complain about sucking at a game. Who cares what the "You Lose!" message is.

    i'd like to know who gave the order to recall the game...

  • bjmage16

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 9:46 am PT

    Remember, "spasitic" is offensive in the UK. Just because it's not here, doesn't mean it isn't somewhere else.

  • xxxxxn

    Posted Jul 2, 2007 9:29 am PT

    God, I hate how some people overreact to the smallest things in video games. Like how WarioWare touched was removed from shelves just because Ashley said something like "I have granted kids to h***. " or something like that(I never bought the game, so I wouldn't know what she says). I am Lutheran and I don't find that offensive at all(I think it's kind of funny actually).

    And yes, I know that spastic means something different in England, but I have been called words like retarded and moron a few times in my life and I was just like "whatever" and walked away or continued working on my homework or whatever I was doing at the time.

    I hate how the USA censors everything to the point of excess(the banned Pokemon episode where James gets some plastic surgery to win a beauty contest is one example. Is it really that horrible that they can't show that on TV?). I have played much worse video games that are a lot more offensive than that. In Red Steel, the enemies are constantly shouting offensive words/swears(I think I heard F*** you from one of the characters once) and I just laugh when they say that.

    Actually, the only thing that ever bugged me in a brain improving video game was how in Big Brain Academy: Wii Degree, they have the voice coach, which is a voice coming out of the speakers that says things like "record setting pace, you might set a record, good job, you're almost done, keep going, etc". The problem is the voice is so soft sometimes, and it almost never shuts up. I probably hear the voice 6 times on the average practice with ten problems. Also, the voice praises you no matter how badly you do, unless you do really terrible. One time, I was playing and the voice said "wow so fast, incredible speed, you could set a record, record setting pace, and good job", and I only ended up getting a silver at the end. Cmon, that's just ridiculous that any game has to praise the player that much just so people won't get upset.

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