So if you have Facebook or Twitter friends around the ages of 16-30 who own an XBox 360, it is incredibly likely that they've been posting updates about the new Call of Duty game. One of the big controversies with it has been a mission where you play as a US soldier attempting to infiltrate a Russian terrorist group. In this particular mission, you fight your way through a Russian airport, killing (likely) hundreds of unarmed civilians as well as some airport security and later some military units. A video of some of this mission is here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PCoaZNjuLSI
Warning, that video might be computer animated, but it is very graphic.
Now, the publisher has included a checkpoint where you can skip the civilian massacre part. Also you as the player do NOT need to personally kill any civilians (but you can't stop the terrorists from doing so; shooting them will make them all shoot you dead). The game is rated M, which means it is against the law to sell it to anyone under 17, but that doesn't stop inattentive parents from buying it for their children, nor friends giving it younger friends, etc.
I'm not one for censoring access to media outside of the rating system, but obviously this has raised the issue of terrorism and copy-cap incidents, or making this be the foundation for school shootings. Do you think the game has gone too far?