At long last, EA has responded to the wildly inaccurate claims made by the crack Fox news staff regarding Mass Effect. The controversy started when Fox news brought game journalist Geoff Keighley onto their show to try and clear up the rumors surrounding the supposed "sex acts," found in Mass Effect.
Though he tried valiantly to show them the truth, he was largely ignored, and the other people on the show continued to talk about the sex acts and perversion of Mass Effect, even going so far as to call it, "Luke Skywalker meets Debbie Does Dallas."
Now EA has recovered from the shell shock they must have felt when their newly acquired Bioware epic was lambasted in the media. They have issued an response to the claims, and if I may say so myself, it's a pretty good zinger, it's definitely a good read, if only for the warm feeling you'll get when the EA rep accuses Fox News Corp (FNC) of mounting a smear campaign against videogames. Why? Because they are a threat to television. I'll simply reprint the letter below, out of fear that I won't do it justice.
Ms VanHorn,
I'm writing to request a clarification of serious errors FNC made in a story which aired about the video game Mass Effect. (See attachment) As the parent company of BioWare, the studio which created the game, EA would like you to set the record straight on a number of errors and misstatements which incorrectly characterize the story and character interactions in Mass Effect.
Errors include the following:
The resulting coverage was insulting to the men and women who spent years creating a game which is acclaimed by critics for its high creative standards. As video games continue to take audiences away from television, we expect to see more TV news stories warning parents about the corrupting influence of interactive entertainment. But this represents a new level of recklessness.
Do you watch the Fox Network? Do you watch Family Guy? Have you ever seen The OC? Do you think the sexual situations in Mass Effect are any more graphic than scenes routinely aired on those shows? Do you honestly believe that young people have more exposure to Mass Effect than to those prime time shows?
This isn't a legal threat; it's an appeal to your sense of fairness. We're asking FNC to correct the record on Mass Effect.
Sincerely,
Jeff Brown
Vice President of Communications
Electronic Arts, Inc.
I'm very curious to know where this will end up going. I'm very doubtful that Fox News is going to go on the air and say, "oops! We were wrong!" In my opinion, after years of inaccurate news reports and sleazy journalism, I can't imagine Fox is just going to turn it all around now.
Kyle Stallock
Updated June 4th, 2008
Indie Games Journalism
Brendon Lindsey
Updated October 19, 2008
Blu-Ray Review: Bond...
Frank Ling
Updated: Aug. 1th, 2008 Are you a game snob?
Eddie Inzauto
Updated Wed, October 28
Silent Hill scribblings
GamerNode needs your help. Register
now and join thousands of gamers in a
crusade to spread the word of
GamerNode!
Join the Node Army!
Ha. okay, I'll admit: EA is worth something after all lol
I feel weird being on the same side as EA...this is strange.
Nice comeback EA.
Come on people, EA isn't THAT bad. There are plenty of worse publishers/developers out there!
Indeed, Brendon. At least you never hear EA trying to buy reviews, and they have plenty of kickass games. Not their fault there's a group of thickies who buy Madden every year. Hell, if I had something I could repackage and resell every year to the same idiots, I'm doing it.
Hey I know I'd side with ea over fox news anytime.