The studio behind the upcoming dinosaur horror game says it plans to skip the PC release to avoid players creating sexual mods.
Last week, TeamKill Media announced Code Violet, a third-person action horror game billed as a “spiritual successor to Dino Crisis.”
According to the four-person development team that previously developed Kings of Lorn, Quantum Error, and Son and Bone, the game will be released exclusively for PS5 this July.
Set in the 25th century, the game puts players in the role of “Violet Sinclair, a girl plucked from the past” as she uncovers the mysteries of the Aion Bioengineering Complex by avoiding, hiding, and fighting off the creatures and dinosaurs that invade the complex. You have to solve it. .”
TeamKill Media, writing about X, said that concerns about players creating pornographic mods mean there are currently no plans to bring the game to PC.
“For those of you asking about the PC version of Code Violet… the reason we’re not bringing it to PC is because we don’t want anyone modding a cheesy version of the main character as well as other characters in the game,” he wrote.
“We value the artistic vision of the game and story, as well as the voice actors and actors, and we reject any form of subverting this in a sexualized manner.
“Making our work a joke and damaging the reputation of our voice actors and actresses is not worth the extra money we can make.”
“We are not against PC gamers or the PC platform,” he said in another post. “We are not against modders and the fun mods they make. But we are 100% against obscene mods…
TeamKill also said that additional staff will be needed to bring the game to Xbox in the future. “We do not have the time or expertise to devote to the Xbox platform at this time,” he wrote.
Last year, Final Fantasy 16 producer Naoki Yoshida asked fans not to install or create offensive or inappropriate mods when the game moves from PS5 to PC.
Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth director Naoki Hamaguchi did the same last month ahead of the game’s PC release this week.