Skip to main content

Manhunt 2 to Keep Mature Rating

No sooner did the controversial video game Manhunt 2 reach the North American market than clever gamers figured out how to remove filters blurring out some of the game’s most brutal and violent content. However, the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) doesn’t seem inclined to revoke the game’s 17-and-older “M” rating, since the violent content was fully disclosed by developer Rockstar Studios during the ratings process. During a conference call, ESRB president Patricia Vance exonerated Rockstar, saying the developer did nothing wrong.

Following the “Hot Coffee” scandal—in which hidden explicit sexual content was uncovered in the game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas and exposed via third-party software—the violent content in Manhunt 2 was fully disclosed to the ESRB during the ratings process. Vance emphasized that Rockstar cannot be responsible for “unauthorized” changes to the game initiated by third parties. Even with the changes, Vance doesn’t believe the game, as changed through hacks, can “fully restore the product to the version that originally received an AO rating.” In contrast, the sexual content in GTA: San Andreas was accessible via the game, and had not been disclosed during the ratings process.

The ESRB’s stance would seem to protect the availability and ratings of games that fall victim to third-party modifications and hacks, so long as those hacks don’t expose anything in the game which was previously unknown to the ESRB. In those cases, neither the developers—nor, it seems, the ESRB—will assume any responsibility for the result.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Death Stranding 2: release date speculation, trailers, gameplay, and more
Sam Bridges walks on a ridge in front of the moon.

There were plenty of hints along the way, and even some leaks by the leading man himself, but it was only made official at the Game Awards 2022 that Death Stranding 2: On the Beach is on its way. Coming from the same influential and creative mind as the original, as well as the Metal Gear franchise before it, Hideo Kojima introduced the game himself. Of course, nothing about Kojima's games are straight forward, and what was revealed about Death Stranding 2 probably raised more questions than it answered. We're strapping on our boots, connecting to our BBs, and are ready to make the trek to find out everything there is about Death Stranding 2.
Release date speculation

Death Stranding 2: On the Beach only has the wide release window of 2025.
Platforms

Read more
Helldivers 2 just got some long-requested changes in its new patch
Four soldiers walk in front of a blue Super Earth flag in the Helldivers 2 trailer.

Players have been eagerly waiting for another Helldivers 2 update, and now it's here, bringing with it massive updates to Stratagems, the galactic map, lobbies, and more.

Patch 01.000.400 released on Thursday, and the patch notes are quite extensive. What most players will notice though are the balance changes to certain weaker Stratagems. For example, the Orbital Gatling Barrage got an increased fire rate, more rounds, increased armor penetration, and a decreased cooldown time. The MG-206 Heavy Machine Gun can now deal more projectile damage -- increased from 100 to 150 -- and decreased reload time, although it also got a slightly decreased fire rate.

Read more
Astro Bot isn’t getting PlayStation VR2 support, Team Asobi confirms
Astro Bot wears a dog backpack.

PlayStation's upcoming exclusive Astro Bot will not receive PlayStation VR2 support, Nicolas Doucet, Team Asobi studio head, confirms to Digital Trends. Doucet says that the team is "100% TV" and notes that the addition of a VR mode down the line is unlikely.

The Astro Bot series first made a name for itself thanks to PlayStation VR. Team Asobi's Astro Bot: Rescue Mission was hailed as one of the VR platform's best games when it launched in 2018, leaving fans curious to see if the studio would develop a game for Sony's newest headset, the PlayStation VR2. In an interview with Digital Trends at Summer Game Fest, Doucet confirmed that VR isn't in the cards for its new game for logistical reasons.

Read more