28 September 2013 Last updated at 21:33 BST
The Red Cross wants to have a greater influence in the virtual world of battlefields.
The aid organisation is arguing that as virtual war games are becoming close to reality, the rules of war should be included.
It claims games such as Medal of Honour, or Call of Duty should make sure that actions which could be war crimes are not rewarded with victory in a virtual battle.
Imogen Foulkes reports from Geneva.
I don't get convinced to repeat anything on video games and films because I'm not a complete idiot (most of the time)
ReplyDeletei think they should because no one gets a real look inside war and people just take things like war for granted
ReplyDeletei think that it is ok to play games that are above your age rating but if i had kids i would let them play it if they where mature enough to understand that they are not real and i could trust them to not tell anybody that you play them
ReplyDeletei believe that these games should encourage real war tactics as they are extremely unrealistic in this aspect.
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