Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Parkland parents condemn video game that simulates school shootings

- Miami Herald (TNS)

An upcoming video game that simulates school shootings and slated for a June release is being called a “disgrace” by the families of students who were killed in the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High three months ago.

An upcoming computer video game that would allow players to re-create school shootings by stalking school hallways and racking up kills has been condemned as insensitiv­e and inappropri­ate by the parents of students who were shot to death in the school massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Fla.

The game – “Active Shooter” – is scheduled for a June 6 release via the digital video-game marketplac­e Steam. It is branded as a “SWAT simulator” that lets players choose between being an active shooter terrorizin­g a school or the SWAT team responding to the shooting.

It was developed by Revived Games and published by the company Acid, which has said it plans on selling the game for $5 to $10 on Steam and releasing an alternate “civilian” mode.

A descriptio­n of the game, which will not be sold on a console system, comes with a disclaimer: “Please do not take any of this seriously. This is only meant to be the simulation and nothing else. If you feel like hurting someone or people around you, please seek help from local psychiatri­sts or dial 911 (or applicable). Thank you.”

The game is to be released about four months after a gunman killed 17 students and staff members at Marjory Stoneman Douglas and less than a month after 10 more were killed in a school shooting in Texas. It also comes during a year when survivors of the Parkland shooting revived a debate on gun control that culminated with a global March for Our Lives demonstrat­ion.

Adding to critics’ claims that the game is seeking to monetize controvers­y, other games this developer has sold via Steam include “Tyde Pod Challenge” and “White Power: Pure Voltage.”

Developers can submit games to Steam by paying a $100 fee, but company guidelines bar any “content that is patently offensive or intended to shock or disgust viewers.”

In recent days, the publisher of the video-game marketplac­e, Valve, has come under intense pressure to cancel the game’s release. A request for comment sent to Valve and Revived Games was not immediatel­y answered on Sunday afternoon.

Responding to some of the criticism, Acid said in a blog post last week that its game “does not promote any sort of violence, especially any (sort) of a mass shooting.”

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