No R18+ decision for Australia expected soon
Australian Attorneys-General to discuss introduction of R18+ rating games; formal decision could still be "years" away.
Game classification remains a thorny issue in Australia, with the lack of an R18+ rating for games resulting in titles such as Dark Sector and Blitz: The League being banned in Australia for extreme violence or inappropriate themes. And while various Australian media outlets are reporting today that a change is soon to come, a decision to introduce an R18+ rating down under still looks like it is months to years away from actually happening.
Some mainstream media in Australia are reporting today that the R18+ rating could soon be introduced for games following the announcement that the R18+ issue would be discussed at the next Standing Committee of Attorneys-General (SCAG) meeting to be held on March 28. For an R18+ rating to be introduced, all of Australia's State Attorneys-General and the Federal Minister for Home Affairs would have to agree on the change before it can be passed into law. But a spokesperson for the Home Affairs Minister, Bob Debus, said no decision should be expected to come from the March 28 meeting.
According to the Minister's spokesperson, in a 2005 SCAG meeting it was agreed that the Victorian Government would research the issue of an R18+ rating in Australia further. The SCAG meeting on the March 28, 2008 is simply a chance for that research to be tabled, the spokesperson said.
"Usually those things move pretty slowly at those meetings. It can take years for things to get through. I would imagine Victoria would just present these materials and the states would go away and have another think about it until the next meeting," the spokesperson said.
The lack of an R18+ rating for games in Australia means the highest rating available for a game is MA15+. This essentially restricts any games considered inappropriate for anyone under the age of 15 and makes them illegal to sell in this country. In GameSpot AU's Australian Election feature late last year, then-incoming Labor Government Shadow Attorney-General Joe Ludwig said he did not believe an R18+ rating was necessary for Australian consumers.
"While I understand that many in the community desire the addition of an R18+ rating for video games, the Federal Labor Party does not believe that there are any fundamental problems with the functioning of the classification system in Australia and, as such, we do not currently have any proposals to work with state governments to introduce such additional ratings for video games," he said.
Despite the issue being introduced at the next SCAG meeting, the Home Affairs Minister spokesperson refused to be drawn on whether Labor's position on the R18+ rating had changed. "We'll be examining the decision presented to SCAG," she said.
Hot Stories
Newsmakers
-
Biden: No legal problem with taxing violent games
United States Vice President Joe Biden believes there is no legal restriction on ability to tax violent media. Full Story
- Posted May 14, 2013 5:50 am AEST
-
Just Cause dev promises 'holy f**king sh**' moments in future games
Avalanche Studios co-founder says developer's ambition is for action, not moments that make players cry; steampunk-style game on hold. Full Story
- Posted May 15, 2013 11:33 pm AEST
Featured Stories
-
Bungie shoots down Destiny for PS Vita rumor
Developer confirms image suggesting version of upcoming shared-world shooter in development for Sony's latest portable is a fake. Full Story
- Posted May 16, 2013 10:08 pm AEST
-
Ubisoft planning to release games more frequently
Assassin's Creed and Far Cry publisher says its network of 26 studios and over 7,000 developers will allow company to ship major franchises more regularly. Full Story
- Posted May 16, 2013 9:42 pm AEST
-
Metro: Last Light dev responds to workplace conditions claims
4A Games creative director Andrew Prokhorov thanks Jason Rubin for telling the studio's story, but says, "We deserve the ratings we get." Full Story
- Posted May 17, 2013 5:44 am AEST
-
EA opens DICE LA to make Star Wars games
DICE head would also like to poach top talent from rivals Infinity Ward and Treyarch. Full Story
- Posted May 15, 2013 8:28 pm AEST
-
EA dropping Online Passes - Report
Future EA games won't require Online Passes; the service is being scrapped after tepid player response. Full Story
- Posted May 16, 2013 1:28 pm AEST





