"I said to the team, 'Imagine you're walking around a city, you pop up your phone' — a lot of phones still popped up then — 'and you can call up information on everyone around you. You learn a neighbor is a pedophile. You have a gun. Do you shoot him? If you do, how does that look to those around you?'" he recalled. "People got uncomfortable during that meeting. But the moral complications also struck a few chords. We glorify the wrong things in video games. My wife is a nurse. We were on the highway, and there was an accident, and for a fraction of a second I considered how the crash probably looked (when it happened). But she said, 'I hope everyone is all right.' I told the team: 'We're bad in video games at hoping that everyone is all right. We show things and forget there are people behind them.'"