MMORPG Griefer Crucified In-Game As Punishment

Be careful what you do when you play online, because the punishment can be severe. But perhaps no sentence is as tough as the one imposed on a griefer in the upcoming MMORPG Roma Victor. Cynewulf, the first player within Roma Victor to receive this brutal punishment, will be hung on a cross for a full seven days on full public display in the digital reconstruction of the provincial town of Corstopitum (modern day Corbridge in Northumberland, England).

The punishment was handed down for the all-too-modern crime of ganking, or gang-killing new players as they first appear. Granted, this is much more interesting than the same old “we cannot discuss disciplinary actions” you get from other games.

It’s just fortunate for Cynewulf, (who in real life is a 27 year-old electrical engineer from Flint, Michigan, USA) this barbaric sentence is due to be carried out in cyberspace. 

Kerry Fraser-Robinson, CEO of the company that created Roma Victor, says: “Roma Victor has been designed from the outset to offer an historically authentic and realistic virtual world. Although crucifixion is nowadays synonymous with persecution and religious symbolism, in 180CE it was just one of many severe punishments used by the Romans to punish criminals and to send a clear message out to other potential wrong-doers. And since our online world is historically authentic, we feel that applying this punishment to cheats, hackers and other virtual wrongdoers is not only appropriate, but also adds to the gaming experience by resonating with classical history.

Crucifixion is to be used as a form of player ‘ban’ within the virtual world of Roma Victor, with the length of the ban reflecting the severity of the punishment. For cheating by exploiting a bug and advancing his or her character’s skills unfairly, for example, a player might typically receive a seven-day ban; multiple or more serious offences will result in a longer (or even permanent) ban.

Roma Victor is currently in the final stages of testing and will officially launch on July 1st 2006, after which thousands of players will be able to live out their own virtual lives within ancient Roman-occupied Britannia.
Be careful what you do when you play online, because the punishment can be severe. But perhaps no sentence is as tough as the one imposed on a griefer in the upcoming MMORPG Roma Victor. Cynewulf, the first player within Roma Victor to receive this brutal punishment, will be hung on a cross for a full seven days on full public display in the digital reconstruction of the provincial town of Corstopitum (modern day Corbridge in Northumberland, England).

The punishment was handed down for the all-too-modern crime of ganking, or gang-killing new players as they first appear. Granted, this is much more interesting than the same old “we cannot discuss disciplinary actions” you get from other games.

It’s just fortunate for Cynewulf, (who in real life is a 27 year-old electrical engineer from Flint, Michigan, USA) this barbaric sentence is due to be carried out in cyberspace. 

Kerry Fraser-Robinson, CEO of the company that created Roma Victor, says: “Roma Victor has been designed from the outset to offer an historically authentic and realistic virtual world. Although crucifixion is nowadays synonymous with persecution and religious symbolism, in 180CE it was just one of many severe punishments used by the Romans to punish criminals and to send a clear message out to other potential wrong-doers. And since our online world is historically authentic, we feel that applying this punishment to cheats, hackers and other virtual wrongdoers is not only appropriate, but also adds to the gaming experience by resonating with classical history.

Crucifixion is to be used as a form of player ‘ban’ within the virtual world of Roma Victor, with the length of the ban reflecting the severity of the punishment. For cheating by exploiting a bug and advancing his or her character’s skills unfairly, for example, a player might typically receive a seven-day ban; multiple or more serious offences will result in a longer (or even permanent) ban.

Roma Victor is currently in the final stages of testing and will officially launch on July 1st 2006, after which thousands of players will be able to live out their own virtual lives within ancient Roman-occupied Britannia.

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