The Government has announced a consultation on a legally enforceable classification system for video games. The move follows a report by clinical psychologist Dr Tanya Byron (pictured) into the impact ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. If the Australian public misunderstands how computer games are classified then the opinion piece "Gaming classification bound in ...
A number of internationally renowned mental health experts, leading social scientists, academics, and games industry associations have formally united to oppose the World Health Organisation's "gaming ...
The government's Digital Britain report has unveiled plans to introduce a new classification system for all boxed video games in the UK. Proposed initiatives include a new classification system for ...
We classify things to protect children, and liberate adults. The Guidelines for the Classification of Computer Games may end up doing neither. We classify things to protect children, and liberate ...
The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has announced they are to adopt a "zero classification" policy for future Paralympic Games, which will see an end to athletes being controversially ...
WARNING: the following contains some very coarse language and links to ultraviolent game footage. All of it has been classified MA15+, but as you'll see, it's actually for adults only. With the ...
Saint’s Row 4, an open-world action adventure video game expected to sell millions around the world, has been refused classification by the Australian Classification Board (ACB), meaning it cannot be ...
With the Paralympic Games 2020 now underway in Tokyo, here's what you need to know about the classification system used to ensure fair competition between Para athletes of varied impairments and ...
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