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The website does not advertise the fact that the multiplayer version allows a player to role-play as a member of the Taliban. One online promotion features video interviews with Special Operations personnel who the company says served as consultants to improve the authenticity of the game. The faces of the men interviewed were blurred and their names not given. "By me being a part of it, I at least have some say on how the community is represented," one man says. Britain's Fox said last month that he was "disgusted and angry" by what was a "tasteless product." Fox called on retailers to show their support for the troops by not selling it. "At the hands of the Taliban, children have lost fathers and wives have lost husbands," Fox said. "It's shocking that someone would think it acceptable to recreate the acts of the Taliban against British soldiers." Electronic Arts did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Spokeswoman Amanda Taggart was quoted last month by the Sunday Times as saying video gamers routinely play both good guys and bad guys. "Most of us have been doing this since we were 7: Someone plays cop, someone must be robber," the newspaper quoted her as saying.
[Associated
Press;
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