
The uproar over the Japanese rape simulation game RapeLay, which we covered in February, has made its way to the manufacturer Illusion, and spokesman Makoto Nakaoka is rather baffled by the reaction. This
week the New York- based Equality Now launched a campaign against the
game and "the normalization of sexual violence in Japan," citing
Japan's obligation to the1985 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.
To
recap, RapeLay awards extra points for stalking women, raping virgins
and their mothers, impregnating rape victims, and forcing them to get
abortions.
What's not to love about that, right Makoto?
Here's what he had to say in response to the protests.
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