‘Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands’ Video Game ‘Feels’ Racist, or Something

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By Tom Teodorczuk | 1:15 pm, March 15, 2017

The tenth installment in Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands video game franchise has just been released for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation4 and Xbox One. Developer Ubisoft is billing the game as one of the biggest open world games they have ever published.

The game takes place in Bolivia in 2019 and pits the “Ghosts” U.S. army elite special operations unit against the fictional Santa Blanca Mexican drug cartel.

So, of course, a movement on social media reckons it’s racist. Beyond the fact the enemy is a Mexican cartel, though, people aren’t quite certain why:

Others are more certain:

But still no concrete examples of racism beyond a thematic unease…

The Bolivian government isn’t happy about the country being depicted as a bloodthirsty narco-state, filing a formal complaint to the French embassy in La Paz. Bolivia’s Interior Minister Carlos Romero even threatened legal action.

A Ubisoft statement responded: “Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands is a work of fiction, similar to movies or TV shows. Like all Tom Clancy’s games from Ubisoft, the game takes place in a modern universe inspired by reality but the characters, locations and stories are all fantasies created solely for entertainment purposes.”

Good luck taking on that defense in a court of law as opposed to the Twitter justice system.

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