California News

Gov. distances himself from 'Conan' game

Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Conan the Barbarian the video game

The video game industry and the governor are on opposite sides of a long legal battle over ultra-violent video games. (KABC Photo)

There's a new video game featuring the character Conan the Barbarian. He's the fictional character that catapulted bodybuilder-turned-action star Arnold Schwarzenegger toward fame and fortune. Now the governor is keeping his distance from the Conan video game.

The head-slashing "Conan the Barbarian" is one of newest ultra-violent video games to make it to store shelves in time for the holidays. But the cover is looking awfully familiar.

"[That's] Governor Schwarzenegger," says video game shopper Fred Baker. "He was Conan."

He was Conan -- oh-so-long ago. The 1982 movie catapulted the bodybuilder-turned actor toward fame in one of Arnold Schwarzenegger's best-remembered roles. Today, a quarter of a century later, he has shorter hair and designer suits.

He is distancing himself from Conan, the video game.

"The Conan character existed far before the governor portrayed him in the movies, and it still exists in different forms of entertainment," said Aaron McLear, the governor's press secretary. "The governor has no association with that game."

Furthermore, the video game industry and the governor are on opposite sides of a long legal battle over stricter rules regarding ultra-violent video games and minors. "Conan" and similar games already have an "M" rating for mature audiences, but the state wants more disclosure of content and the ability to impose fines.

Until the courts settle the issue, child psychologist and state Senator Leland Yee says parents have to take responsibility.

"While our kids may be tugging at us and saying, 'Can you buy this,' 'Can you get this for us?' Ultimately, we parents have to, must take control on this issue," said state Senator Yee.

THQ, the maker of "Conan", insists it based the video game on Robert E. Howard's short stories, and not the governor's movie.

Still, gamers say it's hard not to make the association and want to buy it.

"The people that know the old-school movies can't help it. They see Conan, they think Arnold," said gamer Zachariah Alfred. "But the new generation has no association whatsoever."

It's unclear how popular the video game is. "Conan" has only been out seven weeks, and no sales figures have been released.

(Copyright ©2010 KABC-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

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