

Dangerous High School Girls in Trouble is the intriguing name of a critically acclaimed casual game (it was nominated for last year's Writer's Guild award for best writing). Up until recently, you could get it from Big Fish, a site that hosts casual games.
Not anymore. Rock Paper Shotgun details the fuss from the game being pulled for an inappropriate scene. Big Fish explains:We are not censoring content, it was a judgment call on what is appropriate or not for the BFG brand and it was a scene that was not spotted by our testers prior to release and not even in the gray area of acceptable. To be transparent with you all, the scene that was brought to our executives' attention was a branch in the story that resulted in the implied violent rape of a woman in graphic detail. So this is not about "family friendly" or "rated G" this is a simple judgment call on what we want the BFG brand to represent and that type of content definitely was not it.
The game's developer posted the text from the scene in question:"(person's name) overlooks her unconscious form, trousers dropped to his ankles. Nail marks and bites on his arms seep red."
He also noted that no rape took place, and that the attempt is foiled when the attacker is shot.
Personally, I'd expect no less from a game with so salacious a title. But I'd also be surprised to find something like that in, say, a Nancy Drew mystery. If I were Big Fish selling the game to that sort of target audience, I'd either pull the game or slap an advisory on it. This all strikes me as the appropriate amount of ado about something.
Dangerous High School Girls in Trouble is still available directly from the developer.