Left 4 Dead 2 banned in Australia
Aussie Classification Board cites "realistic, frenetic and unrelenting violence" as cause for antipodean zombie game ban.
Left 4 Dead 2's planned mid-November local release was put in jeopardy today, when the Australian Classification Board had put its legislative foot down. The Classification Board is the government body responsible for rating all video games content authorised for sale in the country. According to its Web site, Valve's upcoming first-person shooter has been refused classification (RC) for failure to adhere to the current maximum MA 15+ ratings guideline for games. (Only films can reach the board's maximum R18+ rating.) The announcement means the Valve title is now illegal to sell, rent, or promote within Australia.
GameSpot AU contacted the game's publisher, Electronic Arts, seeking clarification as to why the title was refused classification. An EA spokesperson confirmed the ban but declined to comment on the possibility of edits or resubmission, saying, "We're still working through the submission process with the [Classification Board], we want to explore all opportunities before we can make a comment." The Classification Board was unavailable to provide an overview of the reason for the ban at the time of print.
Left 4 Dead 2 marks the fourth game banned in Australia this year, joining Risen, Sexy Poker, and Necrovision--the latter two of which were approved for sale after being resubmitted with changes. The original Left 4 Dead game was given the maximum MA 15+ rating when it went on sale in Australia in November last year.
Left 4 Dead 2 tells the story of four survivors in the southern United States and is spread across five campaigns, each divided up into several levels. The original Left 4 Dead was praised for its dynamic AI and online cooperative play.
Stay tuned to GameSpot AU for full details as they become available. For more on Australia's classification regime, check out our Censory Overload feature.
[UPDATE] GameSpot AU has received the official ruling from the Classification Board. The refusal largely focuses on the Board's interpretation of the game's violence, finding that "the game contains realistic, frenetic and unrelenting violence which is inflicted upon 'the Infected' who are living humans infected with a rabies-like virus that causes them to act violently."
The ruling goes on to say, "However, it is the use of the 'melee' weapons such as the crowbar, axe, chainsaw and Samurai sword which inflict the most damage. These close in attacks cause copious amounts of blood spray and splatter, decapitations and limb dismemberment as well as locational damage where contact is made to the enemy which may reveal skeletal bits and gore."
Interestingly the report also notes that "a minority of the Board is of the opinion that the violence is strong in playing impact and therefore warrants an MA 15+ classification with the consumer advice of strong violence," suggesting the ruling was anything but unanimous among Board members.
Content you might like…
-
Sydney gamers take to the streets over R18+

A group of Sydney residents set out to inform the nongaming community about the issues surrounding Australia's classification system.
- Jan 7, 2010
Users who looked at this article also looked at these content items.
Hot Stories
Newsmakers
-
BioShock 2 Interview: Kent Hudson, Martin Slater, and Alex Vancomerback
2K Marin and 2K Australia developers talk about international studio collaboration, addressing the issues of the original, and making things more personal in the upcoming sequel. Full Story
- Posted Feb 8, 2010 12:54 am GMT
-
ModNation Racers PSP First Look Interview
We talk to the developers of ModNation Racers on the PSP as we take our very first look at the game! Full Story
- Posted Feb 5, 2010 2:00 pm GMT
Featured Stories
-
Sony sells 6.5M PS3s in Q4, posts $871.2M profit
Electronics giant back in black after months in red; PS3's sales jump by 2 million during holidays--life-to-date sales hit 33.5 million; PSP and PS2 sales slump, annual game-software sales estimate cut by 40 million units. Full Story
- Posted Feb 4, 2010 9:57 am GMT
- 503 Comments
-
Xbox Live dropping original Xbox support April 15
Cessation of online play will affect all XBL-enabled games for Microsoft's original console, including Xbox Originals and Xbox 360-optimized games like Halo 2; single-player games will function normally. Full Story
- Posted Feb 5, 2010 5:37 pm GMT
- 701 Comments
-
Fallout: New Vegas drops fall 2010, first trailer debuts
[UPDATE] Bethesda confirms Obsidian-developed installment in postnuclear RPG series will arrive later this year for PS3, 360, and PC; teaser trailer for game inside. Full Story
- Posted Feb 4, 2010 3:38 pm GMT
- 351 Comments
-
Sonic the Hedgehog 4 goes episodic this summer
Project Needlemouse revealed as side-scrolling sequel to speedster's original Genesis trilogy; Episode 1 confirmed for Wii, Xbox 360, PS3. Full Story
- Posted Feb 4, 2010 8:02 am GMT
- 250 Comments
-
Splinter Cell: Conviction infiltrates April 13
Ubisoft uses conventional announcement tactic to announce fifth--and apparently final--release revision for the Xbox 360 and PC Tom Clancy stealth-actioner. Full Story
- Posted Feb 4, 2010 9:01 pm GMT
- 199 Comments
Related Game
- Electronic Arts
- Valve Software
- Sci-Fi First-Person...
- Release: Nov 20, 2009 »
- PEGI: 18+






WTA2k5 posted Sep 19, 2009 10:41 am GMT (does not meet display criteria. sign in to show)
shadowysea07 posted Sep 18, 2009 11:04 pm GMT (does not meet display criteria. sign in to show)