In the 1980s especially, some especially Fundamentalist Christian religious groups accused the game of encouraging interest in sorcery and the veneration of Demons.
Widespread Panic | Moral Re-Armament | Panic! at the Disco | moral | Space Panic | Panic Room | Panic of 1873 | Satanic panic | Panic of 1893 | Widespread Panic (album) | Satanic Panic in the Attic | Panic of 1907 | Panic of 1857 | moral character | Everyday (Widespread Panic album) | Ain't Life Grand (Widespread Panic album) | Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral | Panic Room (film) | Panic of 1837 | panic | moral support | Moral responsibility | moral relativism | Moral Re-Armament (MRA) | Moral Orel | Moral Midgetry | Moral character | Milan Panić | Estate of Panic | Don't Panic Discussion at The New School |
Treating Survivors of Satanist Abuse is a collection of essays edited by Valerie Sinason addressing the treatment of those who allege they are survivors of Satanic ritual abuse (a phenomenon generally considered a moral panic by most scholars).
Marshall was found guilty and was sentenced to death by hanging; this was later commuted to transportation for life after a public outcry.
The 1959 film Raggare! was about raggare and the moral panic of the time.