Hi there perverts. This is a small maze game. After the maze you gain control of a totally perverted sex scene.
Feel free to while watching this horny run.
Game objectives
Emulator used: BizHawk-1.2.0
Insane Glitch Abuse
This movie contains sexual content
The bkm-file is commentated
Commentary
The game has a few levels which are different long.
I manipulated a level which can be finished very fast, cause of dull hitbox detection.
And assuming you're talking about the US, they're not illegal.
They're not protected speech.
There is a difference.
Ok, I'm not american. Can you please tell me the difference? I'm really serious.
Unprotected but legal speech is actionable, but not necessarily punishable by law. If you made a bunch of racist/sexist comments or sent a picture of your dick to a coworker, for example, your employer would have sufficient cause to fire you and people could sue you, but the government wouldn't ticket you or throw you in jail for it.
There -is- some crossover, generally falling into either disrupting the peace/endangering the public (shouting "fire" in a movie theater for example) or incitement to illegal action/violence in some way that certainly are illegal. There also exist a number of laws stipulating additional penalties when hate speech and the like is part of a crime.
On the subject of censorship, there is nudity on Dailymotion and on Deviantart. We should ban anyone who posts links to those sites.
Deviantart seems to be popular in the MLP thread.
If you really, really need to censor pornography, you could at least keep the game and take out the porn part.
Of course, my opinion is: TASVideos should not censor at all, just have a ESRB-style warning.
Tangent wrote:
Unprotected but legal speech is actionable, but not necessarily punishable by law. If you made a bunch of racist/sexist comments or sent a picture of your dick to a coworker, for example, your employer would have sufficient cause to fire you and people could sue you, but the government wouldn't ticket you or throw you in jail for it.
There -is- some crossover, generally falling into either disrupting the peace/endangering the public (shouting "fire" in a movie theater for example) or incitement to illegal action/violence in some way that certainly are illegal. There also exist a number of laws stipulating additional penalties when hate speech and the like is part of a crime.
Oh... Here is kinda different. The crossover seems to be more common here
My first language is not English, so please excuse myself if I write something wrong. I'll do my best do write as cleary as I can, so cope with me here =)
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Joined: 8/14/2009
Posts: 4089
Location: The Netherlands
I will never understand the logic behind "coarse language" being ranked significantly worse up the age-scale than "bloody violence".
Apparently, a 13 year old is considered old enough for graphical pixelly depictions of bloody violence, but still considered way too young to watch a video in which the word "sucks" is said.
How exactly does that follow?
http://www.youtube.com/Noxxa
<dwangoAC> This is a TAS (...). Not suitable for all audiences. May cause undesirable side-effects. May contain emulator abuse. Emulator may be abusive. This product contains glitches known to the state of California to cause egg defects.
<Masterjun> I'm just a guy arranging bits in a sequence which could potentially amuse other people looking at these bits
<adelikat> In Oregon Trail, I sacrificed my own family to save time. In Star trek, I killed helpless comrades in escape pods to save time. Here, I kill my allies to save time. I think I need help.
I will never understand the logic behind "coarse language" being ranked significantly worse up the age-scale than "bloody violence".
Apparently, a 13 year old is considered old enough for graphical pixelly depictions of bloody violence, but still considered way too young to watch a video in which the word "sucks" is said.
How exactly does that follow?
I guess you have to be american to understand that. The only thing that Europeans care about is violence (especially Germany, where Goldeneye is still banned!). But I find this much more understandable than problems with nudity or bad language.
Current project: Gex 3 any%
Paused: Gex 64 any%
There are no N64 emulators. Just SM64 emulators with hacky support for all the other games.
While on average nudity is more acceptable in Europe (although it obviously varies wildly from country to country), it's not like nobody would bat an eye if there's overt nudity in a videogame aimed at children. It might not get the moral guardians to the barricades as much as in America, but I think there would nevertheless be some discussion.
As for "bad language", I suppose there's much less censorship of that here as well. The extent of bad language censorship in the US often looks quite ridiculous watched from here.
I guess you have to be american to understand that. The only thing that Europeans care about is violence (especially Germany, where Goldeneye is still banned!). But I find this much more understandable than problems with nudity or bad language.
Joined: 3/2/2010
Posts: 2178
Location: A little to the left of nowhere (Sweden)
andypanther wrote:
I guess you have to be american to understand that. The only thing that Europeans care about is violence (especially Germany, where Goldeneye is still banned!). But I find this much more understandable than problems with nudity or bad language.
Maybe relevant, maybe not: Love & Other Drugs is rated 7 (suitable from 7 years old) in Sweden. While the MPAA said "Rated R for strong sexual content, nudity, pervasive language, and some drug material." Most countries rated this at 15+ or 18+, Sweden thought it was fine with 7.
I guess you have to be american to understand that. The only thing that Europeans care about is violence (especially Germany, where Goldeneye is still banned!). But I find this much more understandable than problems with nudity or bad language.
Yeah, Americans really care way too much about bad language in their media. The King's Speech was rated R in America - nobody under seventeen could see it - because Prince George uses the F-word a few times. And, in context, it's not even a rude word - he uses it because he realises that it reduces his stammer, rather than to insult people.