Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies Gets “M” Rating

I have played through a variety of Phoenix Wright games on the Nintendo DS in the past, and those have proved to be worth every single penny that I forked out for the cart, as it provided hours of entertainment, […]

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ESRB Is Now Rating Online Content

The Entertainment Software Ratings Board, or ESRB, is the institution behind the “E” or “M” ratings you see on games. It’s kind of like the video games version of the MPAA ratings. However, the ratings system–intended to let parents know a little more about the content of games they’re giving their kids–has been getting a little long in the tooth lately. For years, an increasing number of game ratings came with a lame caveat: “online interaction not rated by the ESRB.” As more games came online, parents needed information beyond just knowing that the game has an online component. Today, the ESRB announced three new badges describing online play, added ratings to Windows 8 games, and also threw in a nifty crowdsourcing element for games that they can’t get around to rating. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Trulia launches Windows 8 app for the home buyer/seller/renter, Windows 8 Gets a Hulu Plus App,

ESRB now supports Windows 8, introduces cost-free questionnaire for rating digital games

ESRB adds Windows 8, introduces costfree questionnaire for rating digital games

The Entertainment Software Ratings Board has a huge responsibility — to rate and regulate the entire medium of video games — but only has so many resources with which to do so. With the rise of digital delivery, it’s become increasingly difficult to fulfill the task of rating every single title that comes out, but the ESRB is betting on a new initiative that’ll help streamline that process. The new “Digital Rating Service” employs an online questionnaire to determine a wide variety of criteria, beyond just age-appropriateness: content, interactivity, and privacy settings (whether or not it shares your data). As the name implies, the DRS specifically applies to digital delivery services: Xbox Live Arcade, PlayStation Network (on PS3 and Vita), PlayStation Certified devices, Nintendo’s eShop (on the Wii, DS, and 3DS), and Windows 8.

That last one sounds new because it is — Windows 8 games are now part of the ESRB’s rating system. In addition to the new initiative and new platform, the ESRB is also adding more guidance to its game ratings. “Shares Info,” “Shares Locations,” and “Users Interact” are all now part of ESRB guidance, per the changing nature of digital, portable games. The ESRB says its new system will help to streamline its rating process for both itself and game creators, and this will resultant in faster ratings for consumers.

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ESRB now supports Windows 8, introduces cost-free questionnaire for rating digital games originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Oct 2012 12:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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