Ah, yes, the "I've never been a victim of an abuse of power, so I don't believe it exists" argument. A prime example of bias based on anecdotes and experience, that.
Here are some statistics to help rectify that.
Yet it depicts a visibly US-like city environment, with US-only cars including iconic US police cars like the
Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor, with police officers in US-like uniforms. I certainly don't see much resemblence between the cops in the screenshots and
this or
this, do you? This game is
obviously and explicitly set in the US.
Again with the anecdotes.
Also, yes, that is indeed a racially motivated joke - that it references actual events doesn't change the fact that your wording plays explicitly on racist stereotypes. Here's a challenge for you: take a look at crime rates for where you are located across various demographics. Specifically, look at crime rates grouped by socioeconomic status. You'll find a
far stronger correlation between
poverty and crime than between any definition of race and ethnicity and crime. "But then why are there so many non-white criminals?" 1: there aren't really, but the media
loves to sell us that narrative as it's scary and sells ads, and 2: because minority groups are vastly overrepresented on the poorer end of the socioeconomic spectrum, in large part because western societies are structurally racist in many ways both clear and subtle that impede socioeconomic mobility among minorities.
That is pure, utter nonsense. See above.
It's consistently hilarious to see this "come-back" get dragged out every time someone discusses a problematic aspect of society. No, of course, nobody actually cares about actual bad things, no, we all just care deeply about projecting
explicitly false virtue towards random anons online. Sure, that makes sense. Ever heard of Occam's razor? Ever heard of the fact that using ludicrous bad-faith comebacks only makes you look silly?
Source?
... it's literally right there in the genre: it's
a simulator. Sure, "simulator" can mean
a lot of things, but broadly speaking, no game pitches itself as a simulator unless its aim is to in some way present a true-to-life facsimile of the thing simulated. In this case, as this game is clearly set in the US, and the game being a "police simulator", that thing would then necessarily be the realities of being a US police officer, right?
"
A few odd events". Here's
September of this year. That month could maybe be described as "a few odd events", sure, but ... well, reality has existed for longer than that. ~1000 killings a year is not "a few odd events".
(And before you or anyone come dragging the "but they were shot while committing a crime" line: summary execution is not (supposed to be) legal in the US, and is not something police officers should be doing. Lethal force should be an absolute last resort, and only in cases where there is a significant threat to innocent life. There is plentiful evidence that police killings in the US systematically fail to even come close to such a bar. Excessive use of force by police is in direct contradiction of the rule of law.)
Really? There are ~1000 "heavy social media" pushes a year due to police killings in the US?
Yes, and you're actively promoting it. How does that feel?