Similar Articles |
|
PC Magazine February 10, 2011 Jeffrey L. Wilson |
The 10 Most Violent Video Games of All Time What do Bulletstorm, Grand Theft Auto III, Mortal Kombat, and Splatterhouse have in common? They've let gamers spill much, much blood. |
PC Magazine November 1, 2010 Lance Ulanoff |
Violent Video Games: Our Responsibility, Not the Courts No matter how the Supreme Court decides the fate of California's controversial violent video game law, parents must have the final responsibility and say. |
BusinessWeek October 21, 2010 Cliff Edwards |
Mortal Kombat at the Supreme Court The Supreme Court is weighing whether to uphold a California law banning sales of violent video games to minors. |
The Motley Fool July 22, 2005 Nathan Alderman |
Grand Theft, Great Publicity Naughty hidden content in Take-Two's hit game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas will only increase its appeal to teens. |
Salon.com June 11, 2001 Charles Taylor |
The morality police Our hysterical attempts to shield kids from images of sex and violence are stunting young lives -- and trapping us all in a Big Lie... |
AskMen.com Malcolm MacMillan |
5 Things You Didn't Know: Grand Theft Auto The 2008 release of Grand Theft Auto IV turned the video game industry on its head, as it broke sales records and made headlines. Here are five things you may not know about the Grand Theft Auto franchise. |
Reason October 2005 Daniel Koffler |
Grand Theft Scapegoat Video game prohibitionists are highly selective about the evidence they present, hoping to substitute raw emotional appeal for a plausible explanatory framework. Unfortunately, blanket condemnations and frightening anecdotes are likely to be with us as long as they prove electorally profitable. |
Salon.com August 20, 2002 Henry Jenkins |
Coming up next: Ambushed on "Donahue"! More dangerous than Grand Theft Auto 3 -- a defender of video games is given the trash talk-show treatment. Here's what he really wanted to say. |
The Motley Fool September 28, 2005 Steven Mallas |
Gearing Up for a 'Grand' Return A souped-up Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is coming to a shelf near you. With this special edition of the game, Take-Two stock might see a recovery. |
PC Magazine February 15, 2006 Mary Jane Irwin |
Rated V for Violence Legislation against video games is ramping up. |
Salon.com June 11, 2001 Amy Benfer |
Banning censorship First Amendment attorney and author Marjorie Heins argues that obscenity laws do children more harm than good... |
The Motley Fool March 2, 2004 Jeff Hwang |
GTA Boosts Take-Two The next Grand Theft Auto is something to get excited about. |
The Motley Fool June 9, 2006 Steven Mallas |
Terrible Quarter for Take-Two Take-Two has a terrible second quarter, but shareholders should think "Grand Theft Auto IV." |
Salon.com February 22, 2002 Wagner James Au |
Burn down the shopping malls! A new game for Sony's Playstation 2 invites you to run amok as an anti-globalization anarchist. Is State of Emergency a new high in cynical corporate exploitation -- or consciousness-raising in a box? |
PC Magazine September 7, 2004 John Blazevic |
True Crime: Streets of LA True Crime is reminiscent of the Grand Theft Auto series, with its highly detailed cityscape and focus on driving, but here players stop crimes instead of committing them. |
Salon.com May 6, 2002 Wagner James Au |
Playing games with free speech A federal judge says computer games don't deserve First Amendment protection. His decision is wrong, stupid and dangerous... |
The Motley Fool March 4, 2004 Jeff Hwang |
Stand By Take-Two After a series of setbacks, Take-Two Interactive Software finally sent some positive vibes this week, when it confirmed the October 2004 release of the next Grand Theft Auto for Sony's PlayStation 2. It's too bad the good times didn't make it to the weekend, however. |
Salon.com November 11, 2002 Wagner James Au |
It's fun to kill guys wearing acid-wash and Members Only jackets! Grand Theft Auto: Vice City goes where no video game has gone before -- into the dark heart of the 1980s. |
Salon.com January 26, 2001 Amy Benfer |
A game called suicide Teacher and author Jane Katch talks about the value -- and necessity -- of violent play... |
Salon.com |
Games don't kill people -- do they? Games don't kill people -- do they?: Before we rush to damn the video-game industry, let's remember: There's both bad and good in blowing up pixels. |