Starmaker: None of Bioware's stuff was banned.
As indicated by the last two words in the paragraph you quoted, I didn't seriously think that those laws were a consideration for Nintendo.
Starmaker: Why are you posting on the forum while there are thousands of much more important things to do?
Unlike the people behind this campaign, I don't have an agenda to push, and I don't have any inflated sense of self-importance, so I have neither "important" battles to fight, nor windmills to tilt at.
People pick their battles, sure... but in the Europe I live in, in little more than my lifetime we've gone from outlawed homosexuality to legalized same-sex marriage. These changes definitely didn't take place through campaigning against makers of (relatively niche) entertainment products. So, this kind of prioritising of issues feels bizarre when you e.g. have a legal situation like in Russia... influencing local/national policy isn't possible, but influencing the practices of a massive foreign corporation is? A massive foreign corporation, that, probably has more to lose by antagonising religious conservatives etc. As, Nintendo was always very careful about maintaining a "family" image (e.g. the NES's japanese name, the Famicom/Family computer), to the extent that for its release on their platform they even forced the removal of blood and gore from a title largely known for its blood and gore (Mortal Kombat). Seems very optimistic to think any campaigning will make them shed that decades-old stance.
By the way, your name-calling practices in this thread ("asshat/shit-eater/shitstain" et al.) are only
hurting the valid points I see in your posts... whether consciously or subconsciously, ignoring someone's point of view happens a lot more readily if they can't even be bothered with basic civility.