Kmart joins Target in taking GTA 5 off Australian store shelves

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Kmart became the second major Australian retailer to remove Grand Theft Auto 5 from sale following a 45,000 strong online petition. In a statement provided to Kotaku, a spokesperson for the department store chain said it plans to take the game off store shelves "immediately."

"Following a significant review of all content in Grand Theft Auto games Kmart has taken the decision to remove this product immediately," reads the statement. "Kmart apologizes for not being closer to the content of this game."

Kmart's decision follows that of Target's to remove the Rockstar game from sale. In a press release yesterday, General Manager Corporate Affairs Jim Cooper said Target sanctioned the move after customer feedback "about the game's depictions of violence against women."

"We've been speaking to many customers over recent days about the game, and there is a significant level of concern about the game's content," Cooper said. "We feel the decision to stop selling GTA 5 is in line with the majority view of our customers."


As Kotaku points out, Kmart and Target Australia are both subsidiaries of the same retail group, Wesfarmers, though Wesfarmers has yet to make its own statement on the matter.

Australia has a long history with games censorship, though that history took a sharp turn in the opposite direction after the R18+ rating was passed in 2012. The rating, which GTA 5 was approved for, allowed mature games previously banned in the country to go on sale strictly for adult audiences. However, as ABC notes, the Australian Classification Board said it's up to individual retailers to determine which games they choose to make available.

Regarding Target Australia's decision, Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick said, "We are disappointed that an Australian retailer has chosen no longer to sell Grand Theft Auto 5 - a title that has won extraordinary critical acclaim and has been enjoyed by tens of millions of consumers around the world. Grand Theft Auto 5 explores mature themes and content similar to those found in many other popular and groundbreaking entertainment properties. Interactive entertainment is today's most compelling art form and shares the same creative freedom as books, television, and movies. I stand behind our products, the people who create them, and the consumers who play them."

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Related Forum: Grand Theft Auto Forum

Source: http://www.joystiq.com/2014/12/04/kmart-joins-target-in-taking-gta-5-off-australian-store-shelves/

Comments

"Kmart joins Target in taking GTA 5 off Australian store shelves" :: Login/Create an Account :: 62 comments

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DeluxeHazardPosted:

This is such a crass reason to pull off a game from their shelves. Australia is way too strict on video games and that they put poor ideas into the heads of children. The GTA series has been out for a long time and you don't see the people who played GTA: San Andreas as minors going on murderous rampages and finding prostitutes at night.

TomPosted:

Heard about this but its kinda stupid.

GoroPosted:

Honestly, kids are still going to be able to see what it is like.
Regardless, they'll buy from a bigger and better stores...they just lost out on sales

GnarPosted:

This is ridiculous. How can it promote something if people kids havent even seen nor played the game?? They can just get on YT and watch gameply.

WoofPosted:

well hey at least its Australia and not america

MRMURK4G3Posted:

It has an age restriction, i know younger people play it but there is no need to remove it from stores. Either way people will just buy it online so i wouldn't be bothered. I dont see the point in it really because its the players choice if they play it or not.

the_hillbillyPosted:

No it's not! It's a super fun game! And this ain't censorship, this was all thanks to feminazis! The worst type of female ever, the game was supposedly accused of "objectifying women", now the thing with that is, they don't see that this game is just a massive parody of reality, it's really just making fun of today's society, and "objectifying women" is definitely something wrong with society, I disagree with sexism extremely, but I heavily disagree with this game being pulled from Australian retailers, and I disagree with feminazis, I mean there's feminists with valid points, then there's feminazis, who stop at nothing to make the world a living hell.

xSTaTiCBLuExPosted:

It's honestly an overrated game on the boarder of a piece of shit; but this is ridiculous.

NukaPosted:

Thank god I'm not in Australia, the censorship going on there is insane.

RedPosted:

Just stupid... :/ Welcome to Earth.