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House Seeks Probe of 'Grand Theft Auto'
Lawmakers Say Video Game Skirts Ratings System
By JUAN-CARLOS RODRIGUEZ, AP
WASHINGTON (July 26) - An uproar over hidden, sexually explicit scenes in the video game "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" spread to the halls of Congress on Monday.
On a 355-21 vote, the House passed a resolution asking the Federal Trade Commission to investigate the game's manufacturer, Rockstar Games, and its parent company, New York-based Take Two Interactive Software Inc.
"If that company purposely hid that information or material to make a sham of the ratings, it is nothing less than deceptive advertising, and should be punished, in this case severely," said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., last week also asked the FTC to investigate Rockstar. She said the company had "gamed the ratings system" by concealing sex scenes in the game that can be unlocked by computer programs available on the Internet.
Video games usually have layers of content, and sometimes there are hidden areas that can be unlocked with special codes or modifications. A program known as "Hot Coffee" allows players to download the "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" modifications, or "mods," that reveal the dormant scenes.
The game was released last October with an "M," or mature, rating, for players 17 and older. In the wake of a wave of negative publicity about the hidden scenes, the Entertainment Software Ratings Board, an industry group responsible for rating games, changed the "M" rating to an "AO" rating, for adults only.
Take Two Interactive initially said the scenes were not part of the retail version of the game, but were created by third parties. Later the company admitted the scenes were contained in its version.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Target Corp., Best Buy Co. and Circuit City Stores Inc. have pulled the game - last year's top-seller among console games - from their shelves following the rating change.
Rockstar Games has stopped producing the alterable version of the game and is working on a more secure version that will qualify for an "M" rating.
Take Two Interactive was unreachable by phone for comment.
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Have these politicians nothing better to do? The company is already changing the rating of the game, retailers are pulling the copies that have the sex scenes in them, and the company is coming out with a new version that doesn't have the sex scenes. Furthermore, the difference between the 'Mature' rating and the 'Adult Only' rating is only ONE year from 17 to 18. The outrage, the outrage! 😕