UN Australia and Canada pull rape and incest game that tells players to be 'women's worst nightmare' - The following story contains reference to sexual assault, violence against women and misogyny.

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The computer game "No Mercy" centres around a male protagonist who is encouraged to "become every woman's worst nightmare", and "never take no for an answer.". Picture: No Mercy on Steam

By Asher McShane
A game that touts itself as an "incest and non-consensual sex' simulator has been pulled from the world's biggest PC gaming platform in Australia and Canada as pressure mounts on UK authorities to follow suit.

The computer game "No Mercy" centres around a male protagonist who is encouraged to "become every woman's worst nightmare", and "never take no for an answer."

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle, who is responsible for overseeing the government's online safety strategy, described the game as "deeply worrying" and demanded the tech giant take it down.

The game launched on Steam last month and is described by its own developers as containing violence, incest, blackmail, and what they describe as "unavoidable non-consensual sex."

After LBC revealed it was still available on Steam in the UK, it emerged that Australian and Canadian officials had swiftly made it unavailable for download.

Officials in Australia pulled it for being ‘unclassified’. A spokesman for Australia’s department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts said: “The computer game, No Mercy, is unclassified and has now been removed from sale from the Steam platform in Australia.”

Efforts to have the game removed in Australia were spearheaded by campaign group Collective Shout who wrote to the country’s regulator as well as launching a global petition.

After a public backlash the game was also removed from Steam in Canada after less than 24 hours.

Pepe Di'Iasio, General Secretary of the Association of School of College Leaders told LBC: “Just copy Australia. Australia seems to have got a grip on this, they seem to have acted swiftly.

"They realise they have to protect young people who are at the heart of this… I think that we’ve got a game of tennis taking place between Ofcom and tech companies, what we’re seeing is people blaming one another.

"Let’s get the legislation doing what it should do and let’s make sure we can protect the young people who are most at threat from this right now.”
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The video game has 'very positive' reviews from sick users on Steam. Picture: Steam

The game requires a card to buy, but has minimal age-verification checks, with campaigners warning it could be downloaded by children.

“Adult themes exist in video games, but I’m so shocked and surprised by this,” LBC's tech correspondent Will Guyatt said.

“There's probably about 3.5 million active Steam accounts in the UK… I just don't see how this can be openly, easily available and also importantly not removed when people like myself have reported it as unsuitable.”

LBC created a Steam account with full access to adult content by simply ticking boxes claiming to be 18+, and was able to download No Mercy for £9.99.

“Tech companies make it as easy as possible for kids to go on and put in a fake age and put in a card,” child mental health expert Nova Eden said.

She says many parents will be under the misconception that sites like Steam are “a game shop, a social network,” and therefore assume they are properly moderated.

In reality, Steam is not signed up to any age-rating frameworks like PEGI, a content rating system established to help European consumers make informed decisions when buying video games through the use of approved age recommendations and content descriptors.

Anyone can upload a game for sale on the site, which then sits alongside products developed by regulated, mainstream games studios.

LBC reported the game to Steam as inappropriate five days ago. It has still not been taken down, or subject to more stringent controls.
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The game's presence online also raises questions about the regulator Ofcom’s ability to properly moderate content.

It began its crackdown on harmful online content last month as part of the Government’s Online Safety Act, but the regulator told LBC it “can’t investigate individual complaints.”

That’s despite chief executive Dame Melanie Dawes saying as part of LBC’s Online Safety Day last month: “Our under-18s deserve a very different experience to the one they’re getting now, so no pornography, and a significant down-ranking of things like violent content, misogyny.”

The body is due to publish its “children’s codes” which will set out requirements for sites to protect young people online. Tech firms will then have three months to carry out risk assessments.

“I'm very interested to see how [Steam’s parent-company Valve] will justify that topics like this are acceptable in a game, and if they do deem them acceptable, they should make it a hell of a lot harder for your everyday consumer to be able to find,” Guyatt said.

“It's intriguing to see where this fits under the Online Safety Bill.”

Mr Kyle, who is facing pressure over the potential watering down of the Online Safety Act, insisted that Steam should remove the game from its marketplace.

He told LBC: “We expect every one of those [tech] companies to remove content as soon as they possibly can after being made aware of it. That’s what the law requires, it is what I require as a secretary of state, and it is certainly how we expect platforms who operate and have the privilege of access to British society, and British economy, to do.”

Mr Kyle also suggested that the regulator should make a call on whether the game should remain online.

"Ofcom is the regulator," Mr Kyle said. "They are tasked with enforcing and they will make the judgment as to whether content is removed in an appropriate time."

A spokesperson for the Games Rating Authority said:"Game ratings provide parents and players information about the content of video games.

In the UK, physical game releases must carry a PEGI age rating by law. Digital games are not legally required to carry an age rating, but the majority of leading stores use the trusted PEGI age rating process to provide confidence to consumers.

Although games on Steam can optionally apply for a PEGI age rating via our classification process, it is not mandated by the platform prior to a game's release.

The Games Rating Authority has not classified this game and has not been approach to classify it since its release."

Steam did not respond to LBC's requests for comment.
 
Women can have 50 Shades of Grey but men can't have their little sex/rape fantasy game. The world is extremely anti-male and so much so that men can't have any kind of expression of sexual desire. Even unoffensive sexual desires. Women don't want men or at least certain men talking to them looking at them or even jerking off to things in the privacy of their own homes/dwellings. You can't have any sexy women in any forms of entertainment. If it's not safe horny it can't exist. Safe horny means anything that doesn't appeal to straight males.

Let's just keep pretending there isn't a segment of the female population that has rape fantasies. People weren't engaging in rape fantasies in the privacy of their own homes.

It's not my kind of game. I actually want women to be into it and not have to force myself on them. It's just way hotter when they actually want it. I don't see a major problem with this. It's a lame visual novel. If you find it offensive, then don't play it.

Europe and Australia are cucked shitholes. Australia is a former prison colony made up of Anglos. The eternal Anglo meme exists for a reason.
 
Exactly, where is Rape Souls, Rapist Gaiden, Legend Of The Rapist: Twilight Princess? Rapist devs are so fucking lazy always pandering to the lowest common denominator.
Hey look.
I'm the erudite gamer with refined taste.

It must at least be Rape Tactics or preferably 4x Rapetilazation before I might get interested.
 
Why is there a trigger warning in the title? FFS.
Journalistic integrity in copying the article. Also because it amused me that one had to have read the headline before the trigger warning as if the reader was a mouth breather. “Game about RAPE AND INCEST gets banned: trigger warning this article is about bad things!”
 
Journalistic integrity in copying the article. Also because it amused me that one had to have read the headline before the trigger warning as if the reader was a mouth breather. “Game about RAPE AND INCEST gets banned: trigger warning this article is about bad things!”
There’s no archived or regular link to the source so we readers don’t know that it was like that.
 
Banning a edgy rape game is a lot easier than stopping actual cases of rape. Virtue signaling at it't most blatant.
In Canada, a shitskin gets a pat on the wrist if he rapes a woman. In that case, it's even worse as the state acknowledges that the crime isn't a big deal because it was done by someone of a higher caste. Rape is only a problem there if it's done by a white man.
I guess these cucks wanted to take the population's attention away from the absolute Ls trump has been handing them on the economical side of things. Australians have been cucks for decades and like banning video games for fun.
Not that I want rape games to be a normal thing but it's weird they keep pushing for more 'female representation' in games like... Mortal Kombat and Gears of War, and nobody's ever questioned that.
Well, the sales numbers for the newer games speak for themselves.
Exactly, where is Rape Souls, Rapist Gaiden, Legend Of The Rapist: Twilight Princess? Rapist devs are so fucking lazy always pandering to the lowest common denominator.
There is an entire economy of japanese porn games, last I heard they even sold them in stores back when you bought physical copies for games. These games likely all do exist, they're just too obscure for the mainstream outrage machine.
 
This is just the sex offender version of that edgy mass shooter game. What was it hatred?
Yeah it was faux edgy and the protagonist resembled the front man of a bad black metal band. Actually I think the creators were metalhead edgelords from Poland.

Andrew Tate might enjoy this new game though, even the title screams wannabe edgelord. Definitely not for me though.
 
I guarantee you you'll find worse content in the Japanese visual novels that are already allowed on Steam
Honestly, I'm surprised the entire nation of Japan hasn't been canceled by now.

Ever watch SSeth's review of Evenicle? According to him there are rape scenes where boiling water is poured inside a woman to prevent her from getting pregnant, and another one where a monster rapes a girl then eats her alive.

I'll be surprised if this game has something worse than that.
 
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