Tropes/Banned in China

Live-Action TV

 * The Masters of Horror episode "We All Scream For Ice Cream" was banned in the Patagonian states of Magellania and Fireland due to the infamous scene where Virgil dies. Unsurprisingly enough, it was also banned for "attempting to exacerbate coulrophobia" and over fears that it might cause viewers to change their minds about ice cream.
 * The episode is not banned in the rest of the country, but Virgil's death scene is cut.
 * In the Falklands, the original cut of the episode was never officially banned, but instead only aired in full once. The second time the episode was aired, a young viewer complained midway though the airing about Virgil's death scene being "too gruesome". Very soon, some viewers were complaining for the same reason. The episode was then cut short and replaced with episodes of Talking Tom Heroes as filler content. From then on, the episode was never aired in the Falklands again.

Video Games

 * PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds has banned in Netredal by the government due to violence and harmful to players.
 * Pop'n Music and Cookie Run have been banned in Puskana due to annoying designs.
 * Due to Cascadia's "no crypto" policy, Blankos was banned as soon as it was released. An NFT-free version of the game was created one month after the ban.
 * Other countries that banned the game included France, Borneo, Guiana, and Vinland. Vinland and Borneo received the NFT-free version of the game two and five months after their bans respectively, whereas Guiana permanently refused classification to the game, even in a cracked form. The game was not banned in France and Patagonia, but when it was released in those countries, it was the Cascadian crypto-free version of the game. France banned the original game a month later.

Western Animation

 * One particularly-disgusting joke in the animated series Secret Mountain Fort Awesome did not sit well with the people of the frigid, Croatian-majority Patagonian state of Fireland, who have been known to hate mayonnaise and references to armpit hair in kids' cartoons. The scene involved main character Festro talking to his father about his hatred for mayonnaise, and then Festro's father referencing "his mayo", which he says tastes sour but delicious. When Festro asks about where that "dad's mayo" comes from, his father makes him suck on his armpit and tells him that he just tasted it, much to Festro's chagrin. It was at this point both parents and the Cartoon Network fanbase in the country started to complain that Festro was apparently being subject to the questionable act of licking his parent's own armpits by his own father, some even calling it outright pedophilia. This joke led the series to being outright banned from broadcasting in Fireland by the state government, whereas the rest of Patagonia received only the first 2 episodes. Show creator Peter Browngardt was banned from entering the state for his own protection not long after.
 * After word of the incident came out, the episode was banned from syndication in the rest of Patagonia. After which, Festro was reanimated (as in, had all his armpit hair shaved) in case it would be ever aired. The series re-premiered in 2014, a year after the incident.
 * The episode then caught the attention of the show's fanbase in Brittany, and SWB initially refused to dub the 27th episode. However, the decision was overturned due to fan support, and the episode was finally aired with the infamous scene cut out, as well as having the necessary edits applied.
 * The Loud House was banned for two months in Borneo in 2019 after a suggestion from the infamous Addy, citing its adverse influence on children, as well as his comparison of the show's concept of 1 boy and 10 girls to "a very bad boy in a harem of eleven". The ban was overturned by the Bornean Riksdag (Parliament) eventually.

Other

 * The Civil Rights Act of 1918 banned any racist imagery or practice from almost every part of the Commonwealth of America. We're saying almost, because racism laws are very lax in the backwards-cultured South. They do allow race change however, so long as it's not meant for racism.
 * NFTs, blockchain, cryptocurrency, Web3 and all related technologies are banned in select countries for various reasons, although generally its association with terrorism and illegal activities is to blame.
 * First to ban crypto was Patagonia, which declared the technology "a Ponzi scheme in disguise" and banned it in May 2021 after a bill was passed by Parliament outlawing all forms of cryptocurrency and blockchain technology.
 * Next in line were France and Malichka, which banned it in June 2021. Malichka banned it only because of Miraculous Ladybug-themed NFTs being sold (Miraculous is widely hated nationally.) as well as Marko Duganzich's recent Ponzi scheme involving Ethereum.
 * Borneo would ban NFTs in August, then Vinland and the Guianas in September and Cascadia in November.