Slaughter:
Horror at Sony's depraved
promotion stunt
with decapitated goat
by GLEN OWEN and RHODRI PHILLIPS
Last updated at 10:00am on 29th April 2007
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=451414&in_page_id=1770&ct=5
Electronics giant Sony has sparked a major
row over animal cruelty and the ethics of the computer industry by using a
freshly slaughtered goat to promote a violent video game.
The corpse of the decapitated animal was
the centrepiece of a party to celebrate the launch of the God Of War II game for
the company’s PlayStation 2 console.

GRUESOME: One of the
party hosts stands over the goat's carcass
Guests at the event were even invited to
reach inside the goat’s still-warm carcass to eat offal from its stomach.
Sickening images of the party have
appeared in the company’s official PlayStation magazine – but after being
contacted by The Mail on Sunday, Sony issued an apology for the gruesome stunt
and promised to recall the entire print run.
Critics condemned the entertainment
giant, which produces scores of Hollywood blockbusters each year, for its "blood
lust" and said the grotesque "sacrifice" highlighted increasing concerns over
the content of video games and the lengths to which the industry will go to
exploit youngsters.
At the event, guests competed to see who
could eat the most offal – procured elsewhere and intended to resemble the
goat’s intestines – from its stomach.
They also threw knives at targets and
pulled live snakes from a pit with their bare hands.
Topless girls added to the louche
atmosphere by dipping grapes into guests’ mouths, while a male model portraying
Kratos, the game’s warrior hero, handed out garlands.
The International Fund for Animal
Welfare said it was "outrageous" that the animal’s death had been used "to sell
a few computer games".
A spokesman said: "We are always opposed
to any senseless killing of an animal and this sounds like a gruesome death. We
condemn Sony’s actions. It is stupid and completely unjustified."
The party features across two pages of
the latest edition of the company’s PlayStation magazine, which was due to hit
newsstands on Tuesday but has already been sent to subscribers.
We have reproduced the spread –
headlined Sony’s Greek Orgy – here, but have pixellated the image to spare
readers the sight of the goat’s decapitated head hanging by a thread of tissue
from its corpse, with blood dripping to the floor.
But the magazine’s readers were shown
the picture in its full horror.
The article, based on a Sony Press
release, shows more vivid pictures from the event under headlines such as
Topless Girls! and Flesh Eating?
It asks readers how far they would go to
get hold of Sony’s next-generation console, the PlayStation 3.
"How about eating still warm intestines
uncoiled from the carcass of a freshly slaughtered goat? At the party to
celebrate God Of War II’s European release, members of the Press were invited to
do just that . . ."
In God Of War II, which is so violent it
has been given an 18 certificate, players follow Kratos into battle against a
series of fearsome characters from Greek mythology.
Sony describes it as "an adult-rated,
fast-paced bloodbath – and enormous fun to boot", adding that it is "bigger,
better and as brutal as ever".
One reviewer said the title featured
"the most brutal, visceral combat of any action game".
Former Minister Keith Vaz, Labour MP for
Leicester East and a long-time campaigner against violent computer games,
branded the stunt "distasteful and irresponsible".
He said: "The slaughter of animals is
not something that should be done to advertise a product.
"Sony as a global entertainment company
has a social responsibility. At this event it failed in that responsibility.
"I think people should think very
carefully before bringing games like this into their homes.
"I would understand if customers wanted
to boycott other Sony products such as their televisions because of this
controversy."
Sony, based in Japan and run by Welshman
Sir Howard Stringer, is one of the largest media organisations in the world,
boasting global revenues of £40billion from electronics, video games, music,
television programmes and feature films – including Spider-Man 3 and Casino
Royale.
It is regarded, along with Coca-Cola,
Nike and Mercedes-Benz, as one of the world’s most valuable brands.
The company, which released the game in
the UK on Friday, admitted that the stunt had been a mistake. In a statement it
said: "Sony does not condone or sanction any inappropriate behaviour by its
staff or sub-contracted staff.
"It has come to our attention that at
the God Of War II launch showcase, an element of the event was of an unsuitable
nature.
"We are conducting an internal inquiry
into aspects of the event in order to learn from the occurrence and put into
place measures to ensure that this does not happen again."
The party was held last month in Athens
in homage to the game’s Greek mythology themes. Revellers partied against the
floodlit backdrop of the Parthenon.
The Sony spokesman said the animal had
not been slaughtered for the event but had been bought from a local butcher by
the Greek company hired to stage the event.
What purported to be warm intestines was
actually warm offal.
He said Sony’s UK office had been
shocked to see the report in the official PlayStation magazine, which the
company licenses to publishing house Future. Sony is this weekend recalling the
entire 80,000 print run of the magazine.
The offending article will be removed
because of the "sensitivity of the general public over issues of animal
welfare".
The firm refused to say how the goat
died. It is unusual for animals in modern Greece to be killed by having their
throats cut, let alone by being decapitated.
It is not the first time Sony has been
involved in controversy over its games. In 2004, the PlayStation 2 game Manhunt
was banned by High Street stores in the UK after it was linked to the murder of
a 14-year-old Leicester boy.
Last September the relatives of a family
massacred by a New Mexico teenager addicted to Grand Theft Auto: Vice City
launched a £317million lawsuit against the entertainment company.
And in November, Europe’s justice
commissioner Franco Frattini was so shocked by the "obscene cruelty and
brutality" of Sony’s Rule Of Rose PlayStation game that he wrote to all EU
governments urging tighter controls on the "dreadful game".
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