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The very moment man came out of the cave there was violence. Violence has all ready been part of man's condition. Our modern world may seem very violent, but compared to other times it is tame. A thousand years ago villages were attacked, burned, women raped, children killed, whole villages killed, and made slaves.
Recent research is starting to show that it changes the brain and breaks down psychological barriers against violence. Many police departments and the military use violent games to break down the barriers against killing. The younger the child playing these games the longer term effects seem to show that they are more apt to act out in violent ways rather than find other means to solve problems.
You seem to be talking about violence. By ordinary polite standards of behavior, violence is abhorrent and causes discomfort not just to the victim but to onlookers. A slasher movie is one that uses violence because some people seem to enjoy watching it. So you're talking about a different standard than polite society calls for. Gratuitous violence is the sort that is shown just for its own sake, not because (for example) it's a war movie and war is inevitably violent. So if you have a slasher movie, you're going to have gratuitous violence. If there's even more unnecessary violence than the low standard of slasher movies calls for, you'd describe it in the words that you quoted in your question.
Probably because of the scene with the cutting off of his wife/monster's head. It does seem like an extreme rating for the amount of 'violence' in the film.
stress
Research suggests that exposure to violent video games can desensitize individuals to real-life violence and increase aggressive thoughts and behaviors. However, the relationship between playing violent video games and real-world aggression is complex and influenced by individual factors. It is essential to consider other factors such as family environment, personality traits, and social influences when examining the impact of game violence on teen aggression.
weed
i seem to remember trama or stress can excelirate it. so keep stress low and that should help. or just dye the hair back.
They are in no way 'less violent'. They may seem it because tornadoes traval faster than a hurricane but, hurricanes last much longer and take more lives than a tornado does.
Most students seem to play "suden attack" this has led violent thoughts and etc.
Keeping an open mind and looking on the positive side can definitely help you cope with stress. It can make even the hardest issues seem a little bit better.
Jim Bonacci created it. He was inspired to make it, because other flash games didn't seem violent enough.