![]() It is little wonder that the game, titled RapeLay, sparked international outrage from women's groups. Taina Bien-Aime helped yank the game off store shelves worldwide. "This was a game that had absolutely no place on the market," said Taina Bien-Aime of women's rights organization Equality Now which has campaigned for the game to be taken off the shelves.īut the controversy that led to stopping sales of the game instead took it viral. That was how Lucy Kibble and Jim Gardner in Britain heard about it. "I think the idea that you can do it by wholesale banning is just never going to work anyway because we downloaded it for free off the Internet," Gardner said. It is still readily available on dozens of Web sites, sometimes for free. What happened to RapeLay is an example, said Bien-Aime, of why Japan needs to police game makers. ![]() "It's obviously very difficult to curtail activity on the Internet. ![]()
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