His mind has been severely warped by this "accident". He will forever view girls as nothing more than sexual objects, and he will always believe he has an extremely tiny wang after seeing the abominations those stars wield. He needs cash money to fix his fragile little mind.
It is only right.
Heh, like males really need porn to view women as sex objects and oppress them the same way they've oppressed them for millenia?
Because, after all, Marilyn Munroe was known for her 'intelligence.' And it's her music that makes people think Christina Aguilera is hot (despite the fact that she's not)...
I'm not gonna bother with a debate about this (since it's not the topic at hand), but, don't even try and say that women aren't considered sex objects any longer. They were considered property long ago, and many men still deem them as property today.
So,
back onto the topic -- when I was a little girl, only 6 or 7, I saw some pornography. It didn't "warp me." And it wasn't the only time while growing up. But I never became a slut because of it, and it had no bearing on my social, sexual, or intellectual development.
Regardless, I reiterate, no crime against children was committed as I see it. It was likely an error at the pressing factory (because game companies don't press their own discs, they instead pay for the service -- same with pornographic companies -- wanna blame someone, blame the pressing company), and that disc was one of the first, or one of the last, of the discs being pressed, and it got mixed up with the other batch of discs.
Sure, you can go ahead and blame a human for a machine error, you can go and try and claim that it was a 'malicious crime' that was intentional -- but I HIGHLY doubt that any company would do something this reckless and stupid -- not even as a publicity stunt. Too many government agencies who can get involved, too many issues that can arise, and too many restrictions and/or fines that could be put onto the company.
I don't see this as a crime, just a machine error -- and yeah, when you're shipping 20,000,000 copies of a game, it costs much too much to hire employees to pre-check a game (which would remove the factory seal anyway).