On Sunday there was a tragedy in Akihabara, Japan, involving death. A man in his twenties attacked 17 people with a knife. And it's the first time I'm hearing that in Japan videogames are blamed for something terrible like that. Where has all the reason gone?
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Details Surface About Akihabara Killer (Ninja Gaiden 2 Confusion)
As we reported earlier, tragedy struck Tokyo's video game/anime/manga district Akihabara this Sunday. A 25-year-old-man stabbed 17, killing 7. Truly, truly horrible stuff. The killer's name is Tomohiro Kato, and according to blog Japan Probe, details about him include: He had been to Akihabara many times in the past. He worked for a Tokyo-based temp company and had been sent to Shizuoka for work. He played tennis in school. One of his year book sketches includes a character from Namco RPG Tales of Destiny with messages he wrote in English (after the jump). The mass media has already latched onto the game connection, instead of the tennis one to explain this senseless spree. (Because tennis driving people to kill makes no sense — but apparently video games does!)
The chilling part (if trying to kill 17 people wasn't chilling enough!) is how Kato chronicled the events leading up to his mass murders. Truly disturbing. AFP via Yahoo! News incorrectly points out: "On a different site, an anonymous posting on May 27 was entitled 'A disaster in Akihabara' and warned that an incident would take place on June 5." As commenter muu points out, the "disaster" that the thread is referring to? Ninja Gaiden 2 — which went on sale, you guessed it, on June 5th in, that's right, Akihabara. The thread is apparently nothing more than a fanboy flamewar. That Ninja Gaiden 2 Xbox 360/PS3 fanboy fight appeared on television news here as well (above). Yahoo! News Japan has pulled its original story, but at time of posting Yahoo! News was still running that AFP story.
For those interested in how this horrible event might change Akihabara, check out the below post for insights.
AKB Massacre [Meta?Tame]
3:00 AM on Mon Jun 9 2008
By Brian Ashcraft
>> # top # | Q: Kotaku.com (with pictures)
Labels: videogame news, 日本 japan
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