To be told you paid money for a games console whose unseen components ended or ruined lives a world away is more than uncomfortable. Itâs angering.
That much was clear in the discussion of two of Kotakuâs top stories this week, concerning what console makers are, can, and could reasonably do about the use of minerals whose mining and sale, in some parts of the world, fund the ugliest of wars.
And willful ignorance â to choose not to know how your actions affect others, is no better than not caring. Both are, by definition, unethical.
Microsoft has, in a statement, acknowledged the reality of the situation in Africa regarding conflict minerals useful to the manufacture of their electronic goods. It and Sony are part of an industry consortium working on a means to address conflict minerals. Nintendo is not a part of that group, but communicates its expectation to suppliers that they comply with their social responsibility policies.
Is this enough?
Hardcore games consumers may be a saturated market, but they are gamingâs indispensable constituency, and their values absolutely set the course of battleships like Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo. These gamers are famously skeptical and impossible to please; many even attach product loyalties and purchasing decisions to the motives and personalities of those who make the goods. To spend any time arguing with one, in person, in a forum, in the comments of a post on this site, it would be very clear:
They all care deeply about what goes into the games and hardware they buy.
The week in Kotakuâs original reporting:
Top Stories
Did Buying Your Gaming Console Help Fund War Atrocities in the Congo?
The Best Games, The Best Play of The First Half of 2010
Kotakuâs Best of E3 2010 Award Winners
What Do You Get With PlayStation Plus?
Columns
Well Played: The Inconvenient Truth Of Buying Video Games?
Tim Rogers: How I Didnât Get Killed At E3
Stick Jockey: He Doesnât Mind What You Call Them â Unless Itâs âMonopolyâ
Reviews, Previews, Hands-On and Impressions
Transformers: Cybertron Adventures Review: Robots In Disgrace
Catalyst DSi Slim Cover Review: Worst Analogy Ever
Napoleon: Total War: The Peninsular Campaign Review: Wellington Party
Sin & Punishment: Star Successor Review: #1 With A Bullet
Joule iPad Stand Review: At What Cost Stability?
Features
Six Canadian Video Game Characters We Love
Someone Talented Is Making Video Gameâs Best Volcano
News
Nintendoâs Weird Environmental Tips
An Old Suit Case of Mafia II and A New Bag of Pac-Man
The 2010 Club Nintendoâs Members-Only Rewards AreâŠ
You Should Know One of These Boy Band Members
THQ Promising Big-Name Signings (But Who Could They Be?)
Meet Your 2010 American Pokémon Champions
Project Milo Will Be On Your Xbox, Just Not This Year
The Xbox Video Game About The Gulf Oil Spill Isnât Very Fun
Sony Turns A Boxed PlayStation 3 Game Into a Download
Square Enix Seems Interested In 3D (What About You?)
Numbers
iTunes Chart Topper: Scrabble vs. GT Racings Battle Blazes on
Sports
Nessler Knows Your Name in NCAA Football 11
Madden 11 Demo Offers 5-Minute Quarters to All
Perspectives
An iPhone Is So Easy, A One-Year Child Can Unlock It
How I Accidentally Bought The Soundtrack To Nintendoâs 2006
Howâs Your 2010 Gaming Backlog?
Why Isnât There A Big Nintendo Sign In Kyoto?
Reactions
Speak-Up On Kotaku: Pokémon Rematches, The New WWII, Kids Reviews, And A Blizzard Love Letter
Republished Features