Posted November 22, 2014
low rated
Because the ESRB already does limit where games are being sold in the US. If there was no ESRB rating, stores would simply stock games based on whether they sell (aside from if a particular game raised a controversy that the store didn't want to be associated with). However, with the ESRB ratings, that's a convenient tool for people who don't play games to complain about which games shouldn't be sold in stores. The people who want censorship are generally lazy and aren't going to research every game that comes out to decide if they should protest it being sold. But it's much easier for them to protest that AO games shouldn't be sold (which worked and now they aren't available in most retail stores) and now that that worked they're moving on to try to target M-rated games in general. The people who care about games are going to look into a game before buying it and will know whether they object to it or not. The ratings system will only help people who want to push for censorship of ideas that they disagree with.