Epic MickeyandDeus Excreator Warren Spector has generated a whirlwind of debate this week after suggesting that the games industry is relying too heavily on “ultraviolence.” Urging developers to stop drenching the market in blood, Spector has said that it’s time to put the guns and knives away.

“The ultraviolence has to stop,” he toldGI International. “We have to stop loving it. I just don’t believe in the effects argument at all, but I do believe that we are fetishizing violence, and now in some cases actually combining it with an adolescent approach to sexuality. I just think it’s in bad taste. Ultimately I think it will cause us trouble.

Article image

“… We’ve gone too far. The slow-motion blood spurts, the impalement by deadly assassins, the knives, shoulders, elbows to the throat. You know,Deus Exhad its moments of violence, but they were designed — whether they succeeded or not I can’t say — but they were designed to make you uncomfortable, and I don’t see that happening now. I think we’re just appealing to an adolescent mindset and calling it mature. It’s time to stop. I’m just glad I work for a company like Disney, where not only is that not something that’s encouraged, you may’t even do it, and I’m fine with it.”

Harsh words following an E3 where pundits were concerned that brutality in games went a little too far. Personally, I’m all for the violence, and I don’t think it needs areduction, per se. Instead, I want to see more games pushing somethingelseto balance the gory stuff. Adding to the market, rather than taking away from it, is the answer. And I think thereisa market for it.

A battle scene in Battlefield 6 Open Beta

It’s just that publishers are too cowardly most of the time to step away from what they think is an instant sale, which is where the true heart of most game industry problems lie.

capcom evo moment 37

GigabyteMon

A snap of the upcoming MESA update in PEAK

Naked Snake sneaking around in MGS Delta.

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

BO7 key art

yordles animation still image

Milla Jovovich portraying Alice in Resident Evil 2002, wearing a red dress and holding a gun in her hand.