Sony's new patent can automatically spot, censor, or even replace problematic content in real time, turning mature scenes into kid-friendly experience

LectureMaster

Or is it just one of Adam's balls in my throat?


Sony, ever the pioneer, is toying with a future where any game can be flipped into "kid-friendly" mode on demand, and an AI system is holding the scissors. A newly surfaced patent outlines tech that can automatically spot, censor, or even replace problematic content in real time, turning mature scenes into PG experiences without the developer manually building a family-friendly version of the game.

At the core is an AI that analyzes what is happening on screen, violence, gore, sexual content, profanity, or other sensitive material, and then dynamically intervenes. Instead of a fixed content filter, this system responds to what the player is actually seeing or hearing at that moment.

The patent describes the AI muting dialogue, blurring or masking visual elements, or outright swapping assets like blood effects, animations, or character models to make scenes less intense. Because the system is rules-based, parents or guardians could pick from preset profiles or define their own boundaries for what is acceptable.

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This goes several steps beyond classic platform-level parental controls that just block entire games or enforce age ratings. Instead of saying "no" to a title entirely, the AI tries to reshape it so it can still be played, just sanitized. In theory, that could let one copy of a game work for both adults and kids in the same household, with the content adapting per user account.

The system is also pitched as platform-agnostic, meaning it could operate across different devices and services, not just a single console generation. That raises the possibility of AI censorship baked into cloud gaming, streaming, or future subscription platforms, where content is filtered in real time at the service level.

On paper, the idea sounds convenient for families, but it also opens a huge can of worms around creative intent and control. If a platform owner can algorithmically redact scenes, tone, and themes, it effectively gains a new level of editorial power over games that were not designed to be altered this way.

There are also obvious questions around accuracy and bias: what the AI flags as "unsafe," how often it misfires, and whether developers or players get any say beyond whatever presets the platform offers. For now, this is only a patent, but it gives a pretty clear window into how aggressively Sony is thinking about using AI to reshape what players actually see on screen.
 
Thank god I grew up with a Genesis and Mortal Kombat, and am now a total heathen.
 
Enter the flood of "absolute full tilt" porno games to PlayStation.

Then when the AI gets it wrong it's going to be hilarious.

Kids screaming "Mama! What's that?" When the AI misclassifies the monsters gigantic dangly dick swinging in the cutscene, with no pixelated censoring.

Or worse; when the AI screws up the other way and accidentally turns a scene into a porno version, "redacting" Lara Crofts tank top and exposing her ripe bosoms to little Timmy.
 
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Thank god I grew up with a Genesis and Mortal Kombat, and am now a total heathen.
It was great, was it? When most gaming companies (with some exceptions) ignored that kind of bullshit of laughable politics and fake morality, and magazines of the industry treated them like a joke. We had games like Duke Nukem 3D, classic Tomb Raider (with a sexy, charming and strong antihero that didn't care about anyone or anything but fun), Doom, Mortal Kombat, GTA, etc. Politicians and mrs Lovejoys complained about Manhunt and Bully and the industry and community just put the middle finger to them.
 
If you care about censorship, you wouldn't be playing games on Playstation in 2025 anyways. They've been a primary driver of it for years now.
 
This is the problem with gaming now.

These suits want every single product to be appealing to every single person.

The world doesn't work that way.

WE need a reset I think.
I agree I think this should have a setting people who aren't offended have it off and all the people who piss there pants hearing the word crap have it on so there delicate ears don't hear bad words.
 
Presumably that can work the other way too. some AI inserted gore and TA.

Thinking Pokémon but the animals fights are gore feats.

Or peach gets gangbanged at the end of a mario game.

Sounds fun.
 
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This is the problem with gaming now.

These suits want every single product to be appealing to every single person.

The world doesn't work that way.

WE need a reset I think.
Why can't it? I don't give a shit about language, but I don't want my young kids exposed to sex until their balls drop. They might really like the Witcher or Mass Effect, but those things are off limits for a while.
 
Oh fuck off, Sony. How about letting me decide what is problematic and what isn't?
Isn't that the whole point of this patent?

Oh, and I'll repeat once again...... Companies make patents all the time to protect ideas, it does not mean these ideas will ever get made. In fact, we've seen loads of FUD threads about Sony patents for years and very few ever come to fruition but people like to dump on Sony I guess.
 
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