The scandals, moral panics, and flashpoints that changed gaming
US Senate hearings triggered by Mortal Kombat and Night Trap led directly to the creation of the Entertainment Software Rating Board.
Millions of unsold Atari 2600 cartridges — including the infamous E.T. tie-in — were buried in a New Mexico landfill in 1983, becoming the most notorious symbol of the video game crash.
id Software's Doom became the focus of moral panic, congressional investigation, and sustained media blame following high-profile acts of violence, most catastrophically after the 1999 Columbine massacre.
A hidden, disabled sex minigame discovered in GTA San Andreas's PC code triggered congressional hearings, an AO re-rating, product recalls, and a $20 million class action settlement against Rockstar Games.
The extraordinary commercial success of Lara Croft made her the most discussed female game character of the 1990s and the focal point of an ongoing debate about the representation of women in games.
Mystique's 1982 Atari 2600 game depicting a naked General Custer raping a Native American woman tied to a post provoked immediate protests and remains one of the most condemned games ever commercially released.
A December 1997 episode of the Pokémon anime triggered photosensitive seizures in approximately 685 Japanese children, resulting in the temporary suspension of the series and new broadcast guidelines across Japanese television.
Vivarium's Seaman for the Sega Dreamcast — a virtual pet fish with a human face and Leonard Nimoy narration — attracted press attention for its microphone-based interaction, adult tone, and the disturbing nature of the creature itself.
The North American video game market collapsed in 1983, with industry revenues falling from $3.2 billion in 1983 to $100 million by 1985, threatening to permanently end the home console business.
Blizzard Entertainment banned professional Hearthstone player Blitzchung and rescinded his prize money after he expressed support for the Hong Kong pro-democracy protests during a live broadcast, triggering a massive backlash over corporate censorship.
Digital Pictures' Night Trap became a Senate hearing exhibit in 1993, with its live-action horror footage described on the congressional record in terms that made the campy, low-budget game sound far more dangerous than it was.
Acclaim Entertainment ran a series of marketing stunts through the late 1990s and early 2000s — including paying families to name newborns 'Turok,' offering to pay for gravestone advertising, and distributing free tattoos — that generated press coverage but accelerated the company's reputation for desperation.