Gameplay
The player plays as a squad of miniature Marines wearing condom hats who are sent into various people's vaginas and rectums, as well as other parts of the body, in order to kill real-life sexually transmitted infections (STI), which are depicted as monsters. The right weapons must be used to destroy them, which include anti-bacterial and anti-viral guns. The player can order their squad, which consists of up to three additional Marines besides the player, to attack certain enemy types while they cover the others.Plot
The main character is Jack, who commands Foxtrot Squad. The squad, whose members have been deemed too useless by the "top brass", is forced to embark on a dangerous mission with a combat veteran in the hopes that they will either "shape up" or die.Development
The game was funded by Channel 4, in order to promote safe sex for teenage boys. Developer Dan Marshall compared the game to '' Gunstar Heroes'' in its design. He called his Google Search history when making the game "eclectic, horrific and embarrassing", saying that "if my ISP are snooping on me, they're presumably pretty concerned about my well-being", and saying that the game's artist was "constantly getting sent stuff he desperately didn't want to look at". He also said that his eyes were "opened" about sexual health, and realised how easy STIs were to transmit. The game was rejected from release on the Xbox 360 byReception
'' Eurogamer'' said that it was "genuinely refreshing to experience something that gets straight to the point" about sexual health, pointing to "frightening" statistics amongst teenagers. '' Rock, Paper, Shotgun'' praised the game's writing and music, despite remarking on some audio issues. The game was criticised by a feminist blog, Hoyden About Town, for being " misogynist". In a counter-argument by Lewis Denby of '' Gamasutra'', he said that the game does not try to send the message that women's genitals are "filthy and disease-ridden", but rather was a "great idea" due to its focus on sexual education, calling the article "tremendously bad reporting", but ultimately admitting that "the author has a point" and that humorous games about "serious issues" will always be open to criticism.References
{{Size Five Games 2010 video games Twin-stick shooters Windows games Windows-only games Sex education video games Indie games Video games developed in the United Kingdom Size Five Games games Single-player video games