Horses, A Game That Dares to Tackle Taboo Topics
A new game from Italian developer Santa Ragione, Horses, has been banned from sale on Steam and the Epic Games Store due to its graphic content. But is it as incendiary as critics make it out to be? The game's premise - a young man named Anselmo sent to work on a farm where he discovers that his companions are human beings with horse heads strapped to their bodies - sounds like the stuff of bad satire, but trust us, things get very weird, very fast.
Players must tend to the "horses", perform mundane tasks and deal with the unsettling implication that their companions have been forcibly enslaved and subjected to degrading treatment. The graphics are minimalist, which detracts from the experience, but it's a deliberate choice meant to highlight just how much the game is pushing boundaries.
Steam and Epic Games Store initially pulled Horses due to alleged violations of community guidelines regarding in-app content and hate speech, but critics have taken issue with what they perceive as censorship. The developer has claimed that no specific details were provided on what content was deemed problematic.
But the controversy over Horses goes beyond just its explicit content. It raises questions about the role of art in society and whether certain themes should be tackled at all. As one critic noted, "the conversation that has ignited around it - about video games as art and the censorship of art" is proving to be more profound than the actual game itself.
The gameplay experience is deliberately unsettling, with a focus on psychological horror rather than explicit gore. The result is an unnerving atmosphere that leaves players feeling uncomfortable and frustrated. While Horses is not for everyone, its bold approach has sparked a wider conversation about the limits of what can be said in games.
A new game from Italian developer Santa Ragione, Horses, has been banned from sale on Steam and the Epic Games Store due to its graphic content. But is it as incendiary as critics make it out to be? The game's premise - a young man named Anselmo sent to work on a farm where he discovers that his companions are human beings with horse heads strapped to their bodies - sounds like the stuff of bad satire, but trust us, things get very weird, very fast.
Players must tend to the "horses", perform mundane tasks and deal with the unsettling implication that their companions have been forcibly enslaved and subjected to degrading treatment. The graphics are minimalist, which detracts from the experience, but it's a deliberate choice meant to highlight just how much the game is pushing boundaries.
Steam and Epic Games Store initially pulled Horses due to alleged violations of community guidelines regarding in-app content and hate speech, but critics have taken issue with what they perceive as censorship. The developer has claimed that no specific details were provided on what content was deemed problematic.
But the controversy over Horses goes beyond just its explicit content. It raises questions about the role of art in society and whether certain themes should be tackled at all. As one critic noted, "the conversation that has ignited around it - about video games as art and the censorship of art" is proving to be more profound than the actual game itself.
The gameplay experience is deliberately unsettling, with a focus on psychological horror rather than explicit gore. The result is an unnerving atmosphere that leaves players feeling uncomfortable and frustrated. While Horses is not for everyone, its bold approach has sparked a wider conversation about the limits of what can be said in games.