The Yomiuri Shimbun
Arcade game manufacturer Atlus Co., announced Tuesday it will voluntarily recall all 155 units of its Ude-damashii arm-wrestling machine installed across the country, as three people have broken their arms playing the game since its release late July.
The Shinjuku Ward, Tokyo-based company has also requested arcade proprietors take the game out of operation, and will look into the cause of the accidents following the recall.
According to Atlus, all the units were designed for wrestling with the right arm. The game, which was sold to arcades across the country, has ten power levels. If a player keeps winning, he or she can challenge "opponents" at three different levels during each game.
To date, the company has confirmed that a 25-year-old male South Korean tourist in Osaka, a 19-year-old male French tourist in Fukuoka and 24-year-old Japanese man in Kyoto all broke their humerus--the bone between the shoulder and elbow--in their right arms.
(Aug. 23, 2007)
ROFL!
Those faggots deserved it!
Weaklings have to die anyway ;)
I want to try it too.
In my case i would rather brak those robot-arms! :)
Something I don't get... Was the arm of the machine trying to wrestle down the customer's arm?
Because the old machines I have seen in the past in arcades didn't. It was just a big fat arm standing vertically.
If that machine was trying to wrestle for real then no wonder arms got broken.
2/3 victims were gaijin.
>>5 He means that those Gaijins are stupid fags, who are so retarded, that they can't beat a simple machine.
But instead breaking their arms.
just poor....
Japanese technics = to complex for Gaijin-fags!
Is this company located in Saitama?
Would it be different if it were in Dasaitama?
>>9
i c wat u did there