(03-21-2007) Activists ask Bono to help shoot down video game - Boston Globe*

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Activists ask Bono to help shoot down video game


By Khristopher Flack

Bono has developed a reputation as a rock star with a conscience. The leader of the band U2 has cofounded two lobbying groups that raise awareness about Africa's afflictions, created a fair-trade clothing company, and brokered a deal with several major American companies to donate millions of dollars to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS. But now he is caught up in a controversy over one of his own ventures.

Dozens of organizations are asking Bono to stop production of Mercenaries 2: World in Flames, a violent video game in which players become hired mercenaries who invade Venezuela, where a tyrant has tampered with the country's oil supply. Once there, the player takes orders from the highest bidder, buying, stealing, and destroying anything in sight. Samples of the game available online show the mercenary driving through corrugated shacks in jungle villages, firing shoulder rockets from a city sidewalk, and destroying a replica of the state-owned oil company's headquarters. The game, developed by Pandemic Studios, is scheduled for release in the fall.

Bono is a cofounder and chief investor in Elevation Partners, a media and communications company that formed a $300 million partnership with Pandemic in 2005.

"You always hear about all of the humanitarian efforts that he does, so I was surprised he would be involved in a violent game like this," said Jorge Marin, a Venezuelan immigrant who is a coordinator of the Boston Bolivarian Circle, one of the groups that have signed on to the Venezuela Solidarity Network's second campaign to write letters to Bono.

Since last summer, the network has called the scenario in the game a propagandist attempt to defame Venezuela's president , Hugo Chávez. The network sent its first letter to Bono in June; it went unanswered. The new letter appeals to Bono from a spiritual perspective, having collected signatures from dozens of religious organizations, including Fellowship for Reconciliation, the country's largest and oldest interfaith group working on social justice issues. The Globe's attempts to reach Bono for this story were unsuccessful.

Officials at Pandemic -- and gamers salivating over the game's release on online bulletin boards and blogs -- stress that the game isn't any worse than other works of fiction based on a real place.

"While we're flattered that people think Mercenaries 2 is a commentary on the real world, it is just a video game," Pandemic Studios President Josh Resnick said in a prepared statement. "Even though our setting provides gamers with the overall look and feel of Venezuela, it is not an accurate street-by-street depiction, and the characters as well as the story line are completely made up."

But Venezuelan network members point out the research done by Pandemic to give players an authentic experience: Buildings are modeled after photos taken in Venezuela by the company prior to production, and according to one of the game's online forums, Pandemic consulted a mercenary to sculpt its title characters. Pandemic is also the company behind Full Spectrum Warrior, a 2003 game developed to train US soldiers at Fort Benning. The US Army base in Georgia was also home to the infamous School of the Americas -- now the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation -- that was accused of training two officers involved in a coup that temporarily ousted Chávez in 2002.

"We have to put it in the context of how it would feel if the reverse was done," said Gunnar Gundersen, a cofounder of the network who has family in Venezuela. "Can you imagine if a wealthy Venezuelan game-designing company with links to the military and funding from a famous Latin American entertainer invented a game where you invade the US to assassinate the president and take over the economy?"

But it will probably take more than publicity and signatures for the letter-writing campaign to succeed. Following a successful debut at last summer's Electronic Entertainment Expo, Mercenaries 2 has won eight awards from major gaming magazines and websites, well before its official release.

"It's highly likely that we're not going to stop the publication of the game," Gundersen said. "But it would be nice if [Bono] would just give us some kind of response."

In Boston, Marin hopes that Bono reads the letters and considers them from the perspective of a Venezuelan.

"I don't have anything against video games. I just don't think it's good to use real places when you're going to destroy the locations," he said. "There's no reason why they can't make up a name and change the scenery so you can't tell what country it is. Some people think that it's only a game and we shouldn't make a fuss of it, but I think it's important because it's my country. I am a Venezuelan and I care about Venezuela."

© Copyright 2007 Globe Newspaper Company.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/li...vists_ask_bono_to_help_shoot_down_video_game/

Thanks Justin!
 
the point about what the outrage woudl be if the roles were reversed and the backdrop to this game was the United States is pretty valid I think. having said that it is justa game so I don't know. Bono likely has absolutely nothing or very, very, very, very, very little to do with the gaming part of this buisness but obviously by going after Bono these guys get the publicity they'll need to have any success what so ever of shutting down the game. It is kind of interesting though. I wonder what Bono does think of it. I find it hard to belive that he even knows the plot of the video game. I don't picture Bono being one who sits around reading the latest news on the gaming industry or even sitting around playing them for that matter.
 
I can understand why Bono didn't reply. I don't think he would actually have enough sway to stop it from being released. And to acknowledge the complaints, which I think are very legitimate, and not do anything about it would be kind of be frustrating and pointless for everyone. Why do people play this stuff? Grrr.
 
Do you wanna hear a Venezuelan opinion??: dont listen to those bastards, RELEASE THE GAME :madspit:

they don´t do it because is Violence against Venezuela, they do it because they are messing with chavez all migthy :censored:
 
i don't know what to think. i am a huge bono fan. i think he means what he says. the problem is the business side. it almost seems that you could rename the game "bullet the blue sky." this is exactly the sort of thing bono would be against on principle simply because I know he cares or at least cared about that part of the world and it's military problems. remember the moving "bullet the blue sky" rendition on the boston dvd where he called the gun industry the "business of bitter tears?"
 
Do you think, with his high-octane life, Bono has time to scrutinize videogames or every doing of his business ventures? I don't think so. We should not interpret Bono's lack of response to letters he may have been sent as colassal moral hypocrisy. The blame has to be put upon the recipients of the letters. Apparently it's THEY who think the issue is unimportanr and laugh it off, thinking it has to be fake....how could Bono support such a thing. But the controversy is real and whoever recienves these letters now has the responsibility of making sure Bono sees them. Heck, the fans would know how!
 
Tennis05 said:
i don't know what to think. i am a huge bono fan. i think he means what he says. the problem is the business side. it almost seems that you could rename the game "bullet the blue sky." this is exactly the sort of thing bono would be against on principle simply because I know he cares or at least cared about that part of the world and it's military problems. remember the moving "bullet the blue sky" rendition on the boston dvd where he called the gun industry the "business of bitter tears?"

We're talking about a computer game, not any governmental support of dictators, wars or mass production of weapons.

Bono is one of six partners of a venture capital company.
They invest money in companies of arts and media, they don't buy them. And they have no say in it. This is just one of may games Eidos as a publisher distributes.
The setting this time is a south American country, yes. But did you hear any Germans, Japanese, Vietnames or whoever complain only because their country were used as a setting for a game.
Or the Chinese in case of Battlefield 2?

This game has nothing to do with Bullet The Blue Sky, the reasons for that song or his speech during the Boston show.

As Caroni said, the authors of the letter are just afraid that Chavez, the tyrant there, could be portrayed negatively.
Hilarious, how can you portray such a person negatively?
 
Hallucination said:
the point about what the outrage woudl be if the roles were reversed and the backdrop to this game was the United States is pretty valid I think.

it's a valid point but I thinki its being blown out of proportion. It is a video game essentially a work of fiction. If there was a book about someone doing whatever in Venezuala I don't know if we'd be seing this. Maybe we would


QUOTE] "It's highly likely that we're not going to stop the publication of the game," Gundersen said. "But it would be nice if [Bono] would just give us some kind of response." [/B][/QUOTE]



This seems weak at best...the guy is non committal about having an impact and just wants a response?
 
Fuck Chavez and Bush. And Bono and Mick.

Bono *CAN* afford to stop this *AND* save face.

The FOR and anti-SOA people are grassroots pacifist Christians and nuns and priests who know their argument. IF Bono can't listen to the same people that taught him about debt relief, he's even a bigger fraud than we realized.
 
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