When games are criticized in America, the attack usually comes from some right-wing fundamentalist Christian nutcase. That’s not to say that other religions can’t get in on the fun, though. Writer Ebrahim Saifuddin believes that videogames are forbidden under Islam, and has the Holy words to back it up.
Saifuddin quotes the Qur’an to get his point across, such as the worryingly all-inclusive and nonspecific: “There is a man among the people who buys discourses of distracting amusements, so that he may mislead (people) from the Way of Allah, and make a mockery of it. For such people there is a disgraceful punishment.” That certainly covers videogames … and, to be frank, nearly everything that is fun.

According to this writer, Muslims can’t enjoy animate objects (living creatures) as represented in games either: “There are hardly any videogames available that do not have any animate objects in them. This again renders them (games) to be impermissible.” He adds that,“Many a times the female characters in video games are highly inappropriately dressed.” A religion that likes to cover its women from head to toe obviously isn’t going to condoneDead or Alive Paradise.
“Distraction from obedience to Allah” is also a problem for Saifuddin, as he believes some Muslims will forgo prayer in order to keep playing a game. This, of course, is often the main reason why religious folk attack games, books or movies — it’s not that they’rereallyworried aboutHarry Potterpromoting witchcraft, it’s that they’re jealous of kids readingthosebooks instead of the ones God scribbled in.








