Eligibility: Not applicable for countries that banned computers or the internet
This issue was inspired by recent controversy regarding fictional R18 content on online platforms and subsequent banning due to underaged characters, as well as various countries prohibiting import of erotic fictional content from Japan.
On return from the country of Yamato, your brother brought home a copy of the very popular game My Homeroom Teacher can't be this Cute! Unfortunately for him, he was stopped at @@NATION@@'s borders, and arrested. The reason? The game is banned under obscenity laws since it contains erotic content depicting fictional characters who appear under the age of eighteen. After he was bailed, a group of policy-makers and concerned parents have joined your brother in trying to convince you to do something.
1. "It's just a game!" screams your brother. "Why ban fictional content, when quite clearly they don't exist? You should remove this ridiculous legislation and let us exercise our free speech laws.....and our love life!"
Result: Games depicting questionably aged characters in risque positions are all the rage.
2. "Uphold the ban! Down with perverts!" chants @@RANDOMNAME@@, representative of the Concerned Mothers Group of @@NATION@@. "Don't you know that this kind of game is a slippery slope? In fact, don't just ban this game...ban all fictional content that depict underage minors in suggestive poses!"
Result: Drawing children in sunhats is now forbidden.
3. "This is all the problem of that damned Internet!" says @@RANDOMNAME@@. "Remove the Internet, and the good day of morality can come back."
Result: The internet is banned in @@NATION@@
4. "I have a better idea" says the @@RANDOMNAME@@. "Those people in Yamato are causing our country to run a huge deficit in trade! It's bad, bad trade I can tell you. I can make it smaller, so let's start a trade war, it'll be easy to win!"
Result: Yamato and @@NATION@@ have decided size does matter when it comes to trade volume.