Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul
Apparently not.
Ridiculous, as already noted above, there is no such offence, and absolutely nothing physical happening, the whole point of VR is its not real - and you can simply turn off the VR/Game. As everyone has been saying from the start, this bill is complete nonsense, wasting police time that should be used to investigate real crimes.
Reading above there are even settings in the game to stop interaction - "personal boundaries setting", which you would have to disable.
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Which Pip stated above were disabled by player despite the reccomendation from the company.
That being said someone should be able to play any game without fear of harassment, however rape/sexual assault this is not