New Zealand

Microsoft, "Lord of the Rings" Director Peter Jackson Launch Game Studio

Authored by Mark Hefflinger on September 28, 2006 - 1:46pm.
Redmond, Wash. - Microsoft announced on Wednesday that it has partnered with "The Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson to launch a new video game development studio, Wingnut Interactive. A joint venture between Microsoft Game Studios and its Bungie subsidiary -- which developed the "Halo" franchise -- New Zealand-based Wingnut's first project will be a sequel in the "Halo" series. Wingnut will also develop an original game, but Microsoft did not provide additional details.

Private Media Group Expands Adult Mobile Content to Australia/N.Z.

Authored by Mark Hefflinger on June 7, 2006 - 12:46pm.
Barcelona - Adult entertainment publisher Private Media Group announced on Wednesday that it has partnered with Sydney-based mobile entertainment publisher Nomad NetworX to expand distribution of its content to cell phone customers in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa.

New Zealand Bans Rockstar Games' Violent Video Game "Manhunt"

Authored by Mark Hefflinger on December 12, 2003 - 5:17am.
Wellington, New Zealand -- The country of New Zealand has banned video game publisher Rockstar Games' ultra-violent PlayStation 2 title "Manhunt," calling the game "injurious to the public good." Similar attempts to ban the sale of violent video games in the U.S. have run afoul of First Amendment free speech protections. The game, developed at Edinburgh, Scotland-based Rockstar North, is the first video game to be outright banned in New Zealand. "It's a game where the only thing you do is kill everybody you see," said Bill Hastings, chief censor for New Zealand's Office of Film and Literature Classification, which imposed the countrywide ban. "The only way you can accommodate the game's images is by an attitudinal shift… You have to at least acquiesce in these murders and possibly tolerate, or even move towards enjoying them, which is injurious to the public good." Controversy is not new to the company, as earlier this week it announced it would remove the line, "Kill all the Haitians" from its "Grand Theft Auto" title after complaints from Haitian groups and New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg. http://makeashorterlink.com/?O2F962BC6  http://gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?section_name=ret&aid=2707  http://www.take2games.com