If your child is browsing through apps on the app store using your mobile device, he or she may come across a seemingly innocuous game called “ Goat Simulator .” The game has a rating of “9+” and thus is supposed to be acceptable for any child 9 and over to play. At the present moment, “Goat Simulator” and its four sequels are available on iPhone and Android mobile phones, Windows, Mac, and Linux computers, and Xbox and PlayStation video game systems.The manufacturer of the game, a company called Coffee Stain Studios , is a video game developer and publisher based in Sweden. As of 2016, Coffee Stain Studios reported that Goat Simulator had brought in $12 million in revenue. The company’s description of the game in the Apple App store gives no indication of anything insidious or evil, but instead describes a fun game attractive to young children.

Goat Simulator’s Hidden Secret

Video Game Industry Shameless & Unapologetic

Ridicule of Christian Faith in the Supernatural

In fact, if you as a parent look up the game on the Internet to investigate it, you would come across reviews by websites with reassuring titles such as “Christian Post” and “Faith and Safety” which see no problem with it.The website “Christian Post” had the following positive story about the game in 2015:The website “Faith and Safety” provided a review from “Common Sense Media” 2014 which reviewed the game as follows: Parents need to know that Goat Simulator is ... well, a simulation game about goats. There's all sorts of violence as the goat goes on a rampage, gets run over by cars, and falls from tremendous heights. But the game is all meant as a joke -- and the use of a ragdoll physics model makes the goat (and his victims) pretty indestructible and harmless. Parents should be aware that a patch was recently announced for the PC version of the game that will enable broad scale, MMO-like multiplayer. There's no date on this for the iOS/Android versions, but it's a safe assumption it's coming down the line. .. There's really not much of a story in this simulation that started off as a spoof. As a goat, you'll run and prance around a town, head butting whatever you'd like and jumping from great heights, earning achievements along the way. Collecting items around the town will unlock "tall goat" (a giraffe) which does the same sort of things. Players control the goat with their thumb on the bottom left side of the screen, while jumping, head butting and initiating other actions on the bottom right. ..Sounds like a blast. So what’s the big deal? Well nothing. Until you find out your six year old just sacrificed five people to Satan. In 2014 a parent posted the following to a message board:Pretty much. Since this game has been out for a few years now, to the point it has four sequels, you’d figure there would have already been an enormous outcry against it from Christian family groups putting us all on notice that such things exist lurking behind the façade of children’s games. You’d be wrong. In fact you’ll find not one word from any of them.And what of the video game industry? Are they embarrassed? Have they apologized? Are they desperately trying to explain away why they created the ability to perform a Satanic ritualistic simulation in a children’s game? Hardly. Instead, gamer websites freely discuss the Satanic ritual in the game and players have even posted video footage of it on YouTube, which is apparently just a-ok with anti-Christian bigotry.One gamer site, GamesRadar, even shamelessly explains how to perform the Satanic ritual:Popular gamer site IGN also tells kids how to unlock the devil goat:The site Gamepedia describes the “Infernal Throne” located in the game: Inside the Goat Tower is a throne room filled with goats who bow to you as you enter. At the end of the room is a glowing red throne built out of goat and human skulls. Sitting on the throne applies the Goat Queen mutator and teleports you back out of the tower.



After you sit on the Infernal Throne, you then wear a Satanic mask:As if this weren’t enough, there were apparently Goat Simulator trading cards manufactured by a company called “ Steam.” One of them is the blasphemous “ Three Horned Goat Jesus .” The card’s description reads, “ At the dawn of goat history there was a three horned goat that liberated the flock from the oppressive sheep. Her name was Jesus.



Evidenced by the long history of selling Ouija boards in United States toy stores, anything related to the demonic is laughed off as harmless fairy tales by our modern society. It has now gotten to the point that Swedish creators of Goat Simulator supposedly saw a Satanic ritual involving human sacrifice as something fitting for an alleged comedic video game targeted towards children. Is this how low the Faith has ebbed in Sweden? I think we know the answer.



Yet neither the Swedish creators of the game, nor Apple, Android, Xbox, or PlayStation, have had the honesty to come out and advertise what kind of sickening, offensive, and anti-Christian content lurks behind the surface of a “game” they market to children. If they see nothing wrong with Satanic sacrifice and consider it an endearing joke suitable for kids why not put it right on the cover, or mention it in the description? Because like the diabolical character they place in their video games, they want to get into our children’s heads through the backdoor. They know no parent in their right mind would buy a Satanic video game for their 9 year old, so instead they profit off of deceit and subterfuge.



I’m hoping to help destroy this conspiracy of silence regarding this game through wide circulation of this article. I therefore ask you to make this article known far and wide to your Christian relatives and friends to put them on guard as to the bait and switch these video game merchants are playing with our children’s souls. In addition, please feel free to let Coffee Stain Studios, Apple, and any other platform which sells this filth know what you think about their video game and their dishonesty.