

I'm certain it's the same in Asia for a very good reason. a bit of a rugged history with the SU, it's "somewhat" a rougher issue. It's very interesting to talk about western europeans about this, because for them soviet symbols tend not to be "a big deal", and I understand that as for me in turn, the rising sun flag isn't a "big deal", but as Eastern Europe has a. It was no problem for years and years, but then economic interests happened. Sadly enough, this is also a tool for politics, for example a few months ago the government started to screw with the Heineken beer factory for using the red star. None of the above seem to fit a game made for profit. The second paragraph states that depicting these isn't against the law if it is for educational, historical, art, scientific purposes or for public information like news.

§ of the Penal Code lists them in particular too: those are the swastika, the SS-runes, the hammer and sickle, the red star and the arrow-cross (basically the coat of arms of the hung. Generally speaking "totalitarian symbols" are forbidden, but the 335. On the other hand, communist symbols are actually forbidden in some countries, such as (.) Hungary~
