IGN Logo
Skip to content
IGN Plus
IGN Plus
Home
Guides
Interactive Maps
Playlist
Store
Rewards

Site Themes

Change Region

Africa (opens in a new window)AdriaAustralia (opens in a new window)Benelux (opens in a new window)Brazil (opens in a new window)Canada (opens in a new window)China (opens in a new window)Czech / Slovakia (opens in a new window)France (opens in a new window)Germany (opens in a new window)Greece (opens in a new window)Hungary (opens in a new window)India (opens in a new window)Ireland (opens in a new window)Israel (opens in a new window)Italy (opens in a new window)Japan (opens in a new window)Latin AmericaMiddle East - EnglishMiddle East - ArabicNordicPakistan (opens in a new window)Poland (opens in a new window)Portugal (opens in a new window)Romania (opens in a new window)Southeast AsiaSpain (opens in a new window)Turkey (opens in a new window)United Kingdom (opens in a new window)United States (opens in a new window)

More

IGN on socialAbout UsAccessibilityPrivacy PolicyTerms of UseEditorial StandardsDo Not Sell My Personal InformationSite MapBoardsContact Support
©1996-2025 IGN Entertainment, Inc. a Ziff Davis company. All Rights Reserved. IGN® is among the federally registered trademarks of IGN Entertainment, Inc. and may only be used with explicit written permission.

News

All NewsColumnsPlayStationXboxNintendoPCMobileMoviesTelevisionComicsTech

Reviews

All ReviewsEditor's ChoiceGame ReviewsMovie ReviewsTV Show ReviewsTech Reviews

Discover

Videos

Original ShowsPopularTrailersGameplayAll Videos

Account

ProfileLogin SettingsSubscriptionNewsletters

20Q #XX: undefined

Register to keep your streak
 or 
Try to guess the video game: In the input field, type a question that could be answered "yes" or "no". You can ask up to 20 questions before the game is over.

Quick tips to help you guess the answer faster
  • Stick to questions that will be answered with “yes” or “no”
  • Any questions that you ask will count as part of your 20 questions
  • Try to guess the game with as few questions as possible
  • Get an ad-free experience with IGN Plus and gain access to all previous games

Developer Behind PS5-Exclusive Dinosaur Horror Game Says No to PC Because It Doesn’t Want Modders Creating 'Vulgar' Versions of the Main Character

Tyrannosaurus Sex.

The developer behind a recently revealed PlayStation 5 dinosaur horror game has said it will not release a PC version because it doesn’t want modders creating “vulgar” versions of the main character.

Code Violet is a Dino Crisis-inspired third-person action horror game developed by TeamKill Media, the studio behind 2023’s Quantum Error. You play as Violet Sinclair as she tries to escape from a complex overrun by dinosaurs. The game is due out on PS5 only in July 2025, and in a tweet, TeamKill Media explained the lack of a PC version:

“For those asking us about a PC version of Code Violet... The reason we are not bringing it to PC is we do not want anyone modding vulgar versions of the main character as well as other characters in the game.

“We hold our voice actresses and actors with high regard, as well as our artistic vision for the game and story and reject any form of destroying that with sexual mods.

“Making a joke out of our art and possibly tarnishing the reputation of our voice actresses and actors is not worth the extra money we can make.”

Play

IGN's Twenty Questions - Guess the game!

IGN's Twenty Questions - Guess the game!

To start:
...try asking a question that can be answered with a "Yes" or "No".
000/250

That tweet, published on January 19 and already viewed 1.3 million times on X/Twitter, has sparked a debate about the rights and wrongs of modding video games and TeamKill's decision to ditch PC as a platform. It follows recent comments from Final Fantasy developer Square Enix, which expressed concern about mods that alter its games.

In December, Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth director Naoki Hamaguchi asked fans to not make inappropriate mods when the role-playing game comes to PC on January 23. "While the team has no plans for official in-game mod support we respect the creativity of the modding community and welcome their creations," Hamaguchi said. "Though we ask modders not to create or install anything offensive or inappropriate." Final Fantasy 16 producer Naoki Yoshida made a similar comment ahead of that game’s PC launch.

And last week, Koei Tecmo said it removes around 3,000 pieces of offensive Dead or Alive fan art each year. According to Automaton, reasons for the takedowns include altering characters for “adult purposes” in a way that’s damaging to their image.

In a later tweet, TeamKill further clarified: “We are not against PC gamers or the PC platform. We are not against modders and some of the fun mods they make. But we are 100% against p*rnographic mods… period.”

TeamKill was also asked why there’s no Xbox version of Code Violet, and it responded by explaining that it was beyond the studio. “We don’t have the time or expertise to devote to the Xbox platform at this point in time,” it said. “We would need additional manpower.”

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

IGN Logo
Reviews•Editor Columns•News•Guides•How to Watch Guides•Elden Ring DLC Interactive Map•GTA 5 Cheats•Preorders•IGN Store•HowLongToBeat•Deals•Contact Us•IGN YouTube•IGN TikTok•IGN Twitter•Map Genie