Doom
Duke Nukem
Mortal Kombat Fatalities
Conkers Bad Fur Day
Catherine
Manhunt
Bully
Postal
Modern Warfare: airport scene
Leisure Suit Larry
Catherine
GTA : rampages, interactions with hookers
Dead or Alive
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Doom
Duke Nukem
Mortal Kombat Fatalities
Conkers Bad Fur Day
Catherine
Manhunt
Bully
Postal
Modern Warfare: airport scene
Leisure Suit Larry
Catherine
GTA : rampages, interactions with hookers
Dead or Alive
I remember Carmageddon making the news in 1997. It made the game immediately a lot more interesting.
Super Columbine Massacre RPG was pretty damn controversial (Wikipedia link).
Ok, you win
I'm surprised there isn't a Storm the Capitol, Insurrection 2021 game.
Since it hasn't been mentioned yet:
Manhunt
THRILL KILL had some heady controversy around that time as well, for the same reasons.
Hot coffee mod for one of the GTAs (San Andreas I think?), legit news stations were reporting on that
Surprised I haven’t seen anyone mention “Postal” or “Bully”.
From the wiki for Postal… “ A man referred to simply as the "Postal Dude" has been evicted from his home. He believes the United States Air Force is releasing an airborne agent upon his town of Paradise and that he is the only individual unaffected by the ensuing "hate plague". He fights his way from his house to an Air Force Base through various locations, including a ghetto, train station, trailer park, truck stop, and an ostrich farm.”
No mention of Postal yet?
Ion Fury came with some controversy
https://www.eurogamer.net/ion-fury-studio-apologises-for-sexist-and-transphobic-comments-from-staff
Soldier of Fortune. Look it up. SoF Payback was a fun game too.
Hot take on Payback, maybe it's worth a revisit. I remember that game being a dog after the awesomeness that was 1 and 2. Especially with 2's crazy rogue'esque mission generator and stellar multiplayer. We ran a heavily modded MP server for years and it was a blast.
Too bad what happened to Raven. Once in awhile you can still feel and see their spirit in some of the CoD details.
Showing my age here, but the OGs of Doom, Mortal Kombat and GTA turned all the millennial gamers into murderous sociopaths who can't tell the difference between video games and reality. That's after Dungeons & Dragons turned us into murderous sociopaths who can't tell the difference between board games and reality. If I recall correctly, the hoopla around all of that made national news in the States.
No, no, no, Dungeons & Dragons turned us into devil worshipping heathens. The murderers all came from videogames.
I thought rock 'n' roll did both a long time ago. Who would Charles Manson have become without the Beatles' White Album and Helter Skelter?
Right you are. I have fallen to the sway of various evils so many times that I get them mixed up.
I'm old enough to remember the OG Mortal Kombat controversy. If I recall, the Sega and SNES versions were different. I believe the SNES version had no blood and the Sega one had blood.
IIRC the Sega version had the blood hidden behind a code.
It's crazy the controversy that game caused, considering how tame it is compared to what has come out since. But the first MK opened the floodgates to graphic violence in games.
On the menu for the Genesis version Down, Up, Left, Left, A, Right, Down. Opened up the cheat menu.
Burned in to my head as a Sega kid growing up.
Oddly enough, doom and Wolfenstein was never controversial in my circles, but we weren't allowed to play the terminator game. It was very willy nilly. I think quake was a bit of a nono as well, but counterstrike was fine.
There used to be an institution in Germany, abbreviated BPJM (I will spare you the full German name) that checked if games are in need of being restricted due to excessive violence. They curated a public list of games that were only acessible for age 18+ to purchase. You can imagine what this list did for young teenage gamers, it was the forbidden fruit, the Streisand-effect before the Streisand. I played those games before I was 18 and that rating had a bit to do with that. It was colloquially called the Index and so any game that would make it to the Index would be highly sought after by gamer teens.
In other news this institution is the reason why there were some specific changes in a few games for the German market. From what I remember, Command and Conquer ( yes the RTS, not just FPS games went on there) had to change the color of blood for the human soldiers which became robots/cyborgs whatever in the German version.
Don't forget Soldier of Fortune 2 where they replaced all humans with robots and invented a whole new backstory.
Humans created robots, robots staged an uprising, killed all humans. Robots took over the lifes of humans because that was all they knew. That's why there were robot druglords, robot hobos, robot police men, robot scientists, and so on.
This is not a joke.
"Hatred" caused a big controversy ahead of its launch back in 2016, for being a game where the main objective is mass-murdering innocent civilians. Then it released, turned out to be a pretty sub-par uninteresting game and was promptly forgotten by most people.
Kinda feels like any big release has some kind of controversy added to it, be it poor performance, bugs, riddled with mtx/day1 dlc/seasonpass-nonsense, denuvo/horrid-drm-in-general, invasive anticheats, unnescessary launcher apps... you name it.
Off the top of my head the few "hooplas" I can remember. Also I'm not claiming to remember 100% correctly on the reasons/details
Good points, but a few of these are mixing up controversy with genuine critics.
it feels like an exception when a remaster is generally appreciated.
Don't think I ever heard something bad about the Starcraft remaster.
The Yakuza Kiwami games are supposedly good too, but I never played them or the originals.
The Resident Evil games are more like remakes, the only bad thing I heard is about 4. But that was from the perspective of challenge runners, apparently some weirdness going on there. But supposedly absolutely fine for casual gaming, but I never played any of these either.
Did they actually fix the performance of AK or did we just get better hardware to run the game better? And I'm also recalling some gameplay trailer which was sped up to seem like the game was running at 60 fps. But, yea, horrid performance is mostly genuine critique.
With Fallout 4, I think the biggest issue with roleplay was the dialogue options, not the voice acting per se. Basically each dialogue selection was 4 options: "Yes", "Yes (but snarky)", "No", and some non sequitur... give or take, it's been a hot minute since I last played it.
Did they actually fix the performance of AK or did we just get better hardware to run the game better?
They actually pulled it from Steam for a while, and re-released it properly a few weeks later. But yes, they ended up fixing it properly, and it's probably one of the best-looking games of its generation on PC. The photo mode, in particular, is stellar.
They actually pulled it from Steam for a while, and re-released it properly a few weeks later.
Ooh, right. Completely forgot about that. And, yea the game is definitely a looker.
Back when the game was fairly new I did get it as a bundled game with my 2nd gpu. My SLI setup was quite the stutterfest with it, and I don't think it even supported SLI well, or at all. So I shelved it until several years later, and played it through with a lot beefier pc.
Fo76 basically was a shitshow to the point it was false advertising. (Fucking canvas bags)
and moldy powerarmor helmets, which were a potential health hazard.
But even bigger issue, IMO, is the pvp/"mmo" aspect of it, which I don't care one bit. If anything I'd like p2p coop Fallout.
Wasn't Colonial Marines the game that gearbox "stole" budget from so they could fund Borderlands 2?
Iirc, it also had absolutely abysmal AI, with Alien(s) standing perfectly still in clear view, not reacting until they had been shot multiple times.
Then someone found that there was a single value in one of the game's ini configuration files you could change from 0 to 1, and the AI would become competent. The switch had been there since release, over multiple years the game was never updated to flip the "make the AI not braindead" switch. As far as I know, it still hasn't been updated to flip it.
Not a clue about budget stuff.
Iirc the config value key was mistyped, it was supposed to read "tether" (like, alient ai "tethers" to player, so it can find a path to the player, or somesuch), but it was mistyped in the config. ref: https://www.pcgamingwiki.com/wiki/Aliens:_Colonial_Marines#Improved_Xenomorph_AI
haven't tried the fix myself yet, not THAT keen on replaying it. :D
Legally controversial or critically controversial? Legally, Yandere Simulator probably takes the top spot, although it can be debated if it's even considered a game. As for critically, nothing that I've played recently comes to mind. But I would pick The Last of Us 2 for critically controversial
What's the controversy with Yandere Simulator? I missed it.
Those are the ones that I remember off the top of my head. There's more. Way more. And that's looking at only the legally questionable controversies surrounding the game. There's also a ton of moral and critical controversies
Depends what you mean by controversial. Shooting innocent civilians in an airport in Call of Duty or Spec Ops.
Ark releasing DLC for a game that is still in early access.
7 Days to Die, a game that is still in alpha after 11 years.
EA releasing over $1000 in DLC for Sims game most of which is just different colours of the same item.
Hiring a hooker and after the hanky panky you murder he for the cash back.
7 days to die has been making progress though .I remember picking it up and thinking I made a huge mistake then I played it a couple years later and loved it
Is that last one a specific game or did a developer do that?
Grand theft auto in general.
GTA 3 or Vice City, iirc.