A computer game so nauseatingly gory that it came with a barf bag.
Bright druggy graphics that sickened scores of proper English parents.
Gameplay so violent that it inspired one of Britain's most infamous
killing sprees. Soft & Cuddly, released for the ZX Spectrum in 1987,
wasn't quite any of these things. But in an age of manufactured moral
panics, John George Jones's fluorescent punk manifesto sure pissed off a
lot of people. Featuring new interviews with the game's creator, Jarett
Kobek's book dives deep into the gritty world of British yellow
journalism, snarky computer fanzines, DIY home programming, and Soviet
bootleg mixtapes. If Margaret Thatcher's Conservative Party was right
that "video nasties" like Soft & Cuddly were the epitome of 80s
depravity, then this book is headed straight to Hell.