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Parents' Guide to Destiny (PEGI 16)

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Everything parents need to know about the Destiny video-game in one place. From what makes the game so popular and enjoyable to play to what the different ratings authorities have said about it.

Genre and Story

Destiny is an online multiplayer first-person shooting game. With its requirement that you always be connected to the Internet to play it’s somewhat similar to a massively multiplayer online game (MMO) like World of Warcraft, but because other players come into your game through a matchmaking system rather than always being present on your server, the developers instead refer to it as a “shared-world shooter”.

That shared world is a post-apocalyptic science fiction version of our future, in which human beings have colonised other planets only to have those colonies fall during an event called “the Collapse”. Those survivors left on Earth - protected by a mysterious large white sphere called The Traveler that also gives some, called Guardians, special powers - now face the task of repopulation while they face the additional threat of unfriendly aliens.

Developer

Destiny is the first new franchise from developer Bungie since it created the Halo series in 2001.

Format

Destiny is currently available for PS4, Xbox One, PS3, and Xbox 360. Those who want to play together will have to own the same version of the game.

Cost

On the digital stores, Destiny costs £54.99 for the PS4 and Xbox One, and £49.99 for the previous-gen versions. To play certain aspects of the game on PS4, Xbox One or Xbox 360 there’s an additional cost for the subscriptions that let you play games online: PlayStation Plus and Xbox Live Gold.

Length

Destiny has a plot but also features events and other things to do that will keep people playing for a long time. Whereas Halo had a campaign of a certain number of hours and then relied on the separate multiplayer modes to keep people coming back, Destiny ties these in together. The story will be ongoing, and multiplayer will feature throughout.

PEGI Rating PEGI rates Destiny as only appropriate for those who are 16 or older, with content descriptors for Violence and Online play, stating that Destiny “contains frequent moderate violence”. The Games Rating Authority expands on their PEGI rating by explaining that although you mostly kill aliens, during multiplayer “it is possible to kill humans wearing futuristic armour”, and “they react and die as you would expect in real life and their bodies can be seen on the ground before characters ‘re-spawn’.” The Games Rating Authority also mentions the “real-time interaction with other players”, which always carries the risk of exposure to bad language or abuse. Themes

Destiny paints a bleak picture of one potential future of humanity, in which we achieve the technological progress needed to colonise other planets in the Solar System but are then nearly wiped out. It’s a story of survival and heroism on the human level but also has mythic or potentially religious themes with the mysterious magical protector called The Traveler.

Why people play

The success of the Halo series ensures that Destiny has an interested audience from day one, but what will keep those players coming back and bring in new ones is a combination of the story, how it feels to play (how satisfying the movement and combat, how believable the enemy AI), and the multiplayer. Bungie might not want to call Destiny a massively multiplayer online game, but it is massive, and it is multiplayer, and whether people play with existing friends or make new ones it’s that social aspect that will make it an online world they want to spend time in.

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Andrew Robertson
Andy Robertson is the editor of AskAboutGames and has written for national press and broadcast about video games and families for over 15 years. He has just published the Taming Gaming book with its Family Video Game Database.