Nintendo has pulled the release of Dead or Alive: Dimensions in the Scandinavian countries thanks to fears that it may fall foul of Swedish CP laws. A Swedish gamer, noticing that a feature allowing the player to ogle girls under the age of eighteen in bikinis might fall foul of Swedish CP laws that outlaw the depiction of under-18s (in Sweden, the Age of Consent is fifteen) in any situation that a jury decides might be sexual, reported the game to the police. In the ensuing chaos, Nintendo told Sweden and even it neighbours, Norway and Denmark, to GTFO. The worrying thing is that the game really could be considered dangerous CP in Sweden and many other Western countries according to their CP laws.
* yoshi314 crosses fingers, hoping to see Dead or Alive: hot swedish blondes edition.
Picking and choosing 1 or 2 dodgy aspects of law in order to attack the overall picture is easy to do, Bosola, but I have been to both countries and I know which law and culture is working better at the moment, and that is Sweden.
Swedes regard lying to bed someone the same akin to aggressively raping them. That's hardly a sensible culture.
I've followed Sweden for a long time, and visiting the place - speaking to my ex gf and her friends for 9 years... yes... I'm afraid it is true. I can find you 100 articles or more of sheer batshit craziness. And the UK isn't too far behind. But it isn't up to Swedish level of dysfunction. We haven't had "mansplaining" helplines yet.And we also generally add a description of an attacker... rather than "man".... simply because Sweden want to avoid the truth that this was likely a refugee, immigrant, Muslim:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4839706/Swedish-police-officer-stabbed-neckThis happened today.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/16/sweden-man-free-festival-comes-fire/