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All nudity in Dispatch has a big, distracting black bar on it. This ranges from the relatively intense sex scene that kicks off the fourth episode to Blonde Blazerโs comical nip slip. However, the black bars also rear up when characters, for example, flip someone the bird, and the aforementioned sex scene has been almost entirely muted, too. It’s strange for a game with so much violence and swearing to draw the line at obscene gestures and nipples. For example, the graphic murder some less noble players can see at the very end is untouched, as is the profanity-laced spiel that directly precedes it; the blood and the โf–ksโ still flow readily. It makes little sense to be able to say โf–k youโ but be unable to perform a hand signal that gets across the same message.
Dispatch‘s Censorship on the Switch Should Just Be an Option

Dispatch is a mature game and is rated appropriately. Weirdly cutting around those very parts that make it mature underscore what kind of game it is, especially when done with such heavy hands and inconsistency. The game isn’t directly about sex, but it is used as a storytelling element or a punchline like most other comedic movies or television shows, so having it presented in this jarring way is distracting and ensures that this will be the inferior version, portability be damned.
If Nintendo wants to have a variety of games on its platforms โ and it should โ then this sort of editing shouldn’t be mandatory or least a possibility. And it’s slightly unclear why this happened because both parties are speaking vaguely about what happened. AdHoc Studio told Eurogamer that โdifferent platforms have different content criteria, and submissions are evaluated individuallyโ and the studio โworked with Nintendo to ensure the content within the title met the criteria to release on their platformsโ while promising that the โcore narrative and gameplay experience remains identical to the original release.โ
Nintendo then, surprisingly, chimed in with a statement that didn’t do much to clear things up.
โNintendo requires all games on its platforms to receive ratings from independent organizations and to meet our established content and platform guidelines. While we inform partners when their titles don’t meet our guidelines, Nintendo does not make changes to partner content. We also do not discuss specific content or the criteria used in making these determinations.โ









