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The Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) ratings are designed to provide concise and impartial information about the content in computer and video games so parents and caregivers can make informed purchase decisions. ESRB ratings have two equal parts: rating symbols (on the front of the video game box) that suggest age appropriateness for the game and content descriptors (on the back) that indicate elements in a game that may be of interest or concern.
Recently, the ESRB also announced the availability of "rating summaries," a new, supplementary source of information about game content that parents can use when considering which games to purchase for their children. The new rating summaries are accessible via the ESRB Web site at www.esrb.org, its rating search widget — an online tool you can download onto your desktop — and a new mobile Web site (for mobile devices, including phones) at m.esrb.org.
Content descriptors are not intended to be a listing of every type of content one might encounter in the course of playing a game. For more detail about how ESRB assigns content descriptors, click here.
Online Rating Notice
Online-enabled games carry the notice "Online Interactions Not Rated by the ESRB." This notice warns those who intend to play the game online about possible exposure to chat (text, audio, video) or other types of user-generated content (e.g., maps) that have not been considered in the ESRB rating assignment.
The ESRB has additional resources for parents and information about the ratings process on their Web site.
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