Mario Kart Tour being rated 18+ in Brazil is not because the game suddenly became “adult.”
It’s happening because of Brazil’s new online child-safety law, popularly called the “Felca Law.” The law was created after a huge national debate over the sexualization and exploitation of minors online, and it now requires stricter age checks, stronger parental controls, and tougher rules for systems like loot boxes.
So in Brazil, some games and apps may now receive much stricter ratings not because of graphic content, but because of how their monetization and interactive systems are treated under the new law.
@funkykongfac What store? Would be a nice present for my daughter. Any chance it's Target... Even if it is, it's Saturday. I'm sure they sold them all by now. 😔
@ThrillaRilla369 Nope, i really hate this lazy look. Have you ever seen a lady walk across the street in her pajamas that were so worn out that you could see her underwear and wondered to yourself if she knows? Just put on jeans already!
Now Digital Foundry is going to have to pretend that the plastic crap on the left looks better than the screenshot on the right. It’s a collective hallucination fueled by AI hate. The hate, which I partly understand, but I'm not going to lie to myself about what looks better.