The Japanese legislator crashed into the last video game in the Assassin’s Creed hit on Wednesday, complaining that the Samurai’s character destroys the interior of the syntal shrine.

“Shadows” game France’s Ubisoft, which will be released on Thursday, is set in a 16th-century feudal Japan, inspired by real historical events and films about samurai.
But one video in the gameplay on YouTube shows a character who shoots onions to the priests and destroying the traditional drum and altar.
“It is important to treat the culture with respect,” Kada, a member of the Conservative Liberal Democratic Party, said in Parliament.
“I am concerned that the attacks and actions of destruction in the game can lead to behavior in the real world,” Kada said.
The legislator also criticized the French geemehar for using the shrine, which actually exists in his constituency in the Hyog region without receiving permission from the shrine itself.
“Shadows” has already caused a fierce discussion on the Internet and beyond to throw away the black samurai, Yasuke, as one of the two main characters.
The Japanese motion against the reflection of the Samurai character received more than 100,000 signatures.
The text of the petition undermined the “lack of historical accuracy and cultural respect” from the developers of the game.
Japanese gamers also angrily posted that players can destroy the interior of the shrines.
Yuichi Gosa, Associate Professor of the International Research Center of Japanese Studies in Kyoto, said AFP last week that this reaction “was supposed to be provided.”
“I understand that the secularist principles of France, but it is important to admit that ill-considered insults regarding religion can cause strong reactions,” Gose said.
In the past, the 20-year-old Saga “Ausknskaya Vera” was attacked in the past, including the left-wing French politician Jean-Luk Melekhon for how Firebrand Maximilien Robephierre was drawn during the French Revolution.
In addition to the delay, other setbacks that hit “Shadows” by Thursday included copies of the games that are traced a month before the release.
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This article was created from an automated news agency channel without modifications to the text.