The Top 5 Violent Games
The Top 5 Violent Games
5. Mortal Kombat
The one that started it all. It may look pixelated and old now, but it was definitely the most violent video game of its time. Most of us have undoubtedly played Mortal Kombat in some way or another. It has a massive fan base, a movie, and a lot of sequels.
Who can forget how Scorpions would snap their beaks and say, "Get over here!" before hitting them with a horrible uppercut? The game employed real actors and projected their features onto sprites, which made the game look odd but real. It was even cooler when Sub Zero took someone's head off and left their spine hanging below. Death!
4. Carmageddon
This game was out in 1997, so it's an oldie but a goodie. It is still a very fun game, and it was a big deal when it came out because it had video shots from inside the car and real-world physics.
If you think of Mad Max on steroids, you'll start to get a feel for Carmageddon, which takes place in a world after the end of the world where cars dominate. The goal is to race against a small number of other modified death automobiles through different levels, such as deserts, industrial areas, and busy cities, all while listening to the Fear Factory Demanufacture album (hell yeah!). But if you don't want to race, you can hunt down and kill your enemies one by one until you are the last one left. You can run over pedestrians and are even encouraged to do so, getting extra time and points for combination bonuses and "artist impressions" (which you obtain by completely destroying a pedestrian).
When Carmageddon first came out, it generated a media scandal. In most countries, a "safe" version was made featuring zombies, robots, or aliens instead of people. The game was absolutely outlawed in several places. None of this changes the fact that it's a classic and the first 3D driving game that lets you travel anywhere, which led to two profitable sequels.
3. Kill for Thrill
Originally called S & M for Slaughter and Mutilation, Thrill Kill for PlayStation was never released. It was canceled two weeks before it was supposed to come out. EA said they didn't want to "publish such a senselessly violent game" and that it was so bad that they wouldn't sell it to another publisher either. Fortunately, former EA employees put it on the internet, where it is still available.
The game Thrill Kill was really simple. It simply had one chamber where up to four people could fight to the death. Instead of a life bar, there is a kill meter that fills up as you hurt your opponent. When it gets full, you can use Thrill Kills, which are always brutally violent moves that can include dismemberment, mutilation, cattle prods down the throat, or crushing skulls with stilts. Yes, indeed. One of Cleetus' deadly finishing moves was to rip off his opponent's head and consume the blood that flowed from the neck of the person he had killed. The myth says that the eight characters all lived bad lives and died in different ways, and they are now in hell. A hell that looks like the world we live in today. Marukka, the God of Secrets, has set them against each other, promising to bring the one who survives back to life. Every character is fighting for their own survival and the chance to be born again.
For instance, Cleetus is a cannibal from the South. The one person he didn't eat got away, but he lost a leg, which Cleetus carries around for good luck and sometimes uses as a weapon. Dr. Faustus, a great surgeon, died from an infection after putting in his stainless steel jaws, which were manufactured from a bear trap.
Oddball was a senior FBI agent who looked for those who killed more than one person. He started to look up to them and progressively lost his mind. Oddball is very smart, sneaky, and doesn't feel bad about what he does. He doesn't understand pity, sympathy, or compassion. Even though his arms are tied up in his nice little straight jacket, he has learnt to adapt, which is what a good predator should do.
2. Postal 2
One thing you can do in Postal 2 is pick up cats as items in your inventory. As a "silencer," the player shoves the barrel of the gun they are now holding into the cat's anus. The cat meows in pain every time a shot is fired, and the sound of the gunshot is muffled. The cat will die after a few shots and fly off the end of the gun.
You have to talk about any game where you can use a cat as a silencer. Postal and Postal 2 were very violent, and several activist groups protested against them. But the firm that made the series, Running With Scissors, said that the amount of violence in the game is up to the player. It's possible to finish the whole game without hurting anyone, but it's really hard.
From Monday to Friday, the game is split up into easy activities on a to-do list like "Cash Paycheck," "Confess sins," "Get milk," and so on. The player can choose to be calm or completely violent to complete these chores that look simple. Each choice changes the way the game is played. Some violent things that happen in the game are being able to use shovels to decapitate people and then kick their heads around or play fetch with a dog; cops beating innocent NPCs to death with batons, even if the NPC surrenders and begs for mercy; and setting people on fire with gasoline, matches, napalm, and moltov cocktails. Postal 2 is not only brutal, but it's also fairly nasty. You can pee on somebody and make them throw up out of disgust. You can even pee on meals that cops consume and then throw up. If you hit someone with a cow's head loaded with anthrax, they will throw up blood. You can also stun shoot someone till they are so scared that they pee themselves. Postal 2 has a bad reputation for being violent and disgusting. It features ATF, SWAT, the National Guard, psycho butchers, religious cults, the Taliban, and Gary Coleman in it. It is prohibited in at least three nations.
1. Manhunt
Manhunt is probably the most brutal game on the list. It follows James Earl Cash, who has been sentenced to death by lethal injection. Instead of an injection, he gets a tranquilizer, and a rich Hollywood filmmaker kidnaps Cash. The filmmaker loves Snuff movies and casts Cash as his newest star, killing local gangs on camera in the most brutal and horrible methods he can think of.
Cash talks to the director through an earpiece, while security cameras record his murders. To get more points, the player has to kill more people in horrible ways. Some of these are suffocation with a plastic bag, decapitation, and slamming a crowbar into the enemy's head.
When Manhunt first came out, it was prohibited in a lot of nations. Later, in the UK, the game was linked to the murder of 14-year-old Stefan Pakeerah by 17-year-old Warren Leblanc. Stefan's mother said that Leblanc had been obsessed with Manhunt after he pled guilty in court. Because of this, most UK stores took Manhunt from their shelves. This made a lot of other stores and online auction sites want to buy more. The police said there was no connection, but it still sends chills down my spine. This is especially true because Leblanc killed his companion by stabbing him with a claw hammer, which is the same way as Manhunt shows an execution.
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