The Guy Game _top_

The game featured a "host" named "Joe" (voiced and performed by actor Peter Ptaszek), a sleazy, sunglasses-sporting everyman who walked through the crowds of Cancun with a wireless microphone. He was the proxy for the player. Between trivia rounds, Joe would interview the women, asking them lewd questions, measuring their "body temperature," and coaxing them to perform for the camera.

But here is the hook: The game is intercut with full-motion video (FMV) footage shot during an actual Spring Break event in Cancun, Mexico. When a player answers a question correctly, the on-screen female contestants (recruited from the real-life crowd) celebrate. When a player answers incorrectly, the women "punish" the player by—ostensibly—not performing. However, the core mechanic that drove sales was the "Show Me" button. If a male player (the "Guy") answered a certain number of questions correctly, the female participants would willingly flash the camera. The Guy Game

Today, The Guy Game is a collector's oddity. Physical copies on eBay can fetch anywhere from $60 to $200, primarily for the "shock value" of owning a piece of gaming's forbidden history. YouTubers and streamers have attempted to play it on camera, but most run into immediate copyright strikes or age-restriction demonetization. The game featured a "host" named "Joe" (voiced

A young woman, identified in court documents as "M.B.," filed suit against Top Heavy Studios, Sony Computer Entertainment America, and Microsoft. She alleged that she was one of the women featured in the game's footage, and crucially, she stated that she was only 17 years old at the time the video was recorded. But here is the hook: The game is