Posted September 23, 2009
Miaghstir: There are several games without avatars at all, I believe few card games could be considered violent, tetris has already been mentioned, as has peggle, bejeweled and some other games. Minesweeper probably sits in that category as well, even if the spoof movie depicts it differently. Guitar hero and rock band do have some form of avatars or personas in them, but no violence as far as I know.
AlexY: If, as mentioned above, getting a car hit with no visual damage is considered violent, then bending a card, destroying innocent falling blocks, switching and exploding gems, shooting deadly balls that also destroy walls and change their colour can be also considered as violence. Even songs in Guitar hero can be ear-rape then. I mean, come on. What kind of rules are those, Weclock? Are we talking about kids getting into gaming or adults with no gaming influences?
Ramming a car into a wall is a pretty definite reference to real-life violent car crashes even when the digital car has no driver or gets damaged.
The blocks in tetris and the ball and paddle in breakout has no real-life counterpart, the ones in pong may be referenced to table tennis and the cards in card games are pretty much 1:1 depictions of those in a casino, but even for the latter two, the real-life depictions doesn't naturally contain destruction or violence (other than maybe in extreme cases, such as gangster movies where the boss kills underlings that cheat in poker or whatever - those aren't real life depictions, but are real enough to get treated as real memories).
Oh, yeah, also Rockstar's Table Tennis and most other sports games (I'm told some NHL games contain fighting, so disregard those, boxing, and martial arts games).
Jumping on enemies in mario or donkey kong is a stretch, but they do depict a human or humanoid killing other living creatures.
Post edited September 23, 2009 by Miaghstir