In this appeal, we must determine whether the State of Illinois has gone too far in its attempt to protect minors from the allegedly dangerous impact of certain video games. The plaintiffs, associations representing video game manufacturers and retailers, successfully challenged the constitutionality of the Illinois Sexually Explicit Video Game Law in the district court. The State now appeals the district court’s imposition of a permanent injunction against enforcement of the law. Primarily because we conclude that the Sexually Explicit Video Game Law is not sufficiently narrowly tailored, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
On July 25, 2005, the State of Illinois enacted Public Act 94-0315. The Act is comprised primarily of the Violent Video Game Law (“WGL”) and the Sexually Explicit Video Game Law (“SEVGL”). The SEVGL requires video game retailers to place a four square-inch label with the numerals “18” on any “sexually explicit” video game. See 720 ILCS § 5/12B-25(a). It also requires them to place a sign in their stores explaining the video game rating system and to provide customers with brochures about the video game rating system. See 720 ILCS §§ 5/12B-30(a), 35(a). Most significantly, the SEVGL criminalizes the sale or rental of sexually explicit video games to minors. See 720 ILCS § 5/12B-15. The statute imposes criminal penalties on any “person who sells, rents, or permits to be sold or rented, any sexually explicit video game to any minor....” Id.
The SEVGL defines “sexually explicit” video games as:
[Tjhose that the average person, applying contemporary community standards would find, with respect to minors, is designed to appeal or pander to the prurient interest and depict or represent in a manner patently offensive with respect to minors, an actual or simulated sexual act or sexual contact, an actual or simulated normal or perverted sexual act or a lewd exhibition of the genitals or post-pubescent female breast.
720 ILCS 5/12B-10(e).
The day after enactment, the plaintiffs filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, facially challenging the constitutionality of both the WGL and the SEVGL. The plaintiffs are associations representing video game manufacturers and retailers. The defendants are the Governor of Illinois, the Illinois Attorney General, and the State’s Attorney for Cook County (collectively, “the State”). 1 The plaintiffs are all participants in the video game industry’s ratings system — -the Entertainment Software Rating Board (“ESRB”), which rates games on the basis of the maturity/age for which *644 the game is appropriate. 2 At the outset of the litigation the plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction and the defendants moved to dismiss. The motion to dismiss was denied. The district court stayed consideration of the motion for a preliminary injunction and held a three-day trial. Relevant to the SEVGL, during the trial, the State introduced screen shots from three games: (1) Grand Theft Auto: San Andre-as, (2) Leisure Suit Larry: Magna Cum Laude, and (3) The Guy Game: Uncut and Uncensored. Parts of these games feature various images that the State alleges are covered by the law, ranging from digital drawings of exposed breasts to digital animations of sex acts. The plaintiffs introduced the game God of War, a game which takes place in ancient Greece and roughly tracks Homeric themes, as evidence of a benign game which was unconstitutionally criminalized by the law. In God of War, a single scene depicts two bare-chested women in Ancient Greece. The plaintiffs allege that the scene featuring the bare-chested women is critical to the game as it marks the point at which the character rejects the temptations of the physical realm to focus on his mission.
At the conclusion of the trial, Judge Kennelly applied strict scrutiny to the statutes and found for the plaintiffs, concluding that both the WGL and the SEVGL were unconstitutional. 3 Specifically, the court concluded that the SEVGL was not narrowly tailored and that the SEVGL’s brochure, labeling and signage provisions constituted “compelled speech” in violation of the First Amendment. The court also found that sovereign immunity did not bar suit against the Attorney General in this case. 4 The State now appeals only the district court’s rulings pertaining to the SEVGL.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
We review
de novo
the district court’s legal determinations that the Attorney General is not entitled to dismissal on the basis of sovereign immunity and that the SEVGL is unconstitutional.
See Anderson v. Milwaukee County,
B. Sovereign Immunity
The Attorney General challenges the district court’s ruling that she is not immune from suit pursuant to the Eleventh Amendment of the United States Constitution. The Supreme Court has authorized suits against state officials in their official capacities when plaintiffs seek to enjoin allegedly unconstitutionally statutes.
See
*645
Ex parte Young,
In making an officer of the state a party defendant in a suit to enjoin the enforcement of an act alleged to be unconstitutional, it is plain that such officer must have some connection with the enforcement of the act, or else it is merely maldng him a party as a representative of the state, and thereby attempting to make the state a party.
Id. The Attorney General argues that the plaintiffs have only established a “general connection” between her duties and powers and the SEVGL but not the specific connection necessary to overcome sovereign immunity. She argues that her primary duties do not involve the prosecution of ordinary criminal cases (as a prosecution under the SEVGL would be), but only in criminal appeals.
We are unconvinced by this argument. The Attorney General concedes that she has the power to enforce the SEVGL; the power is simply concurrent with that of the State’s Attorney. This satisfies the “some connection” requirement of
Ex parte Young. See In re Dairy Mart Convenience Stores, Inc.,
The Attorney General’s reliance on our decision in Sherman v. Community Consolidated School District 21 of Wheeling Township 5 is misplaced. In Sherman, we concluded that the Attorney General was immune from suit in a challenge to an Illinois statute which required recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance. See id. at 441. But the statute in Sherman had no enforcement provisions or penalty clauses. Id. Involvement of the Attorney General was highly improbable because he had no authority to prosecute the plaintiff under the statute. That is not the situation in this case.
Moreover, the Supreme Court has instructed us that, “[i]n determining whether the doctrine of
Ex parte Young
avoids an Eleventh Amendment bar to suit, a court need only conduct a ‘straightforward inquiry into whether the complaint alleges an ongoing violation of federal law and seeks relief properly characterized as prospective.’ ”
Verizon Md., Inc. v. Public Serv. Comm’n of Md.,
C. Constitutionality of the SEVGL’s Sale and Rental Provisions
The plaintiffs argue that the sale and rental provisions of the SEVGL facial
*646
ly violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. As the State concedes, the SEVGL is a content-based restriction on speech, and we must employ strict scrutiny in assessing its constitutionality.
6
See United States v. Playboy Entm’t. Group,
Here, the State’s identified purpose is “shielding children from indecent sexual material and in assisting parents in protecting their children from that material.” Governor’s Br. at 16. We need not spend time determining whether this is a compelling interest; it clearly is.
7
See Ashcroft v. ACLU,
We think it important first to reaffirm our observation in
American Amusement Machine Association v.
Kendrick,
8
In
AAMA,
we concluded that the plaintiffs were entitled to a preliminary injunction against a city ordinance that restricted minors’ access to violent video games because the city had failed to demonstrate a compelling interest.
AAMA,
None of the parties allege that the games affected by the SEVGL are “obscene,” as that term is understood in the parlance of constitutional law; the State rather contends that the games are “indecent” and subject to appropriate legislation limiting their distribution to minors. As in
Playboy,
it is undisputed that the State has no power to limit the sale of the games in question to adults.
See Playboy,
In
Ginsberg v. New York,
Five years after
Ginsberg,
the Court revisited the question of the appropriate obscenity standard with regard to material for adults. The Court held that a state’s
*648
ability to criminalize the distribution of obscene materials only extends to those which “taken as a whole, do not have serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.”
See Miller v. California,
But the Court has not made it so clear— none of its subsequent decisions have explicitly stated that
Miller’s
amendment of the
Memoirs
test also affected
Ginsberg. See Pacifica,
It ultimately does not matter. Either
Ginsberg
or
Miller
provides us with the third prong in an appropriate standard for what material can be regulated in the manner of the SEVGL. That is to say, somewhere between
Ginsberg
and
Miller
we arrive at the basement for constitutionality of a statute criminalizing the distribution
*649
of sexually oriented materials to minors. Inexplicably, the State of Illinois chose to ignore both
Ginsberg’s
and
Miller’s
third prongs in creating the SEVGL’s definition of “sexually explicit.” The State thereby simultaneously failed to narrowly tailor the statute and created a statute that is unconstitutionally overbroad.
See Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The SEVGL’s “sexually explicit” definition is evidently modeled after the first two prongs of the
Ginsberg/Miller
test, but includes neither the “utterly without redeeming social importance for minors” language of
Ginsberg
or the “taken as a whole, do not have serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value” language of
Miller.
After
Miller,
a number of statutes have been found unconstitutional that included the
Miller
language or some hybrid of
Miller
and
Ginsberg. See, e.g., Ashcroft v. ACLU,
Importantly, in failing to consider
Miller,
the drafters of the SEVGL also neglected to include a requirement that any work in question be considered “as a whole” in determining whether a defendant should be subject to criminal penalties. While the Court has yet to explicitly fuse
Miller
and
Ginsberg,
it seems clear to us that in so amending the adult test for obscenity, the Court also intended to require that the work be considered “as a whole” in the context of statutes applicable to juveniles.
See Miller,
The game
God of War,
discussed above and cited by the district court, is illustrative of this point. Because the SEVGL potentially criminalizes the sale of any game that features exposed breasts, without concern for the game considered in its entirety or for the game’s social value for minors, distribution of
God of War
is potentially illegal, in spite of the fact that the game tracks the Homeric epics in content and theme. As we have suggested in the past, there is serious reason to believe that a statute sweeps too broadly when it prohibits a game that is essentially an interactive, digital version of the
Odyssey. Cf. AAMA,
The possibility of such prosecution is far from illusory. Illinois has created a statute which allows prosecution in any of its counties solely on the basis of “contemporary community standards” with regard to the lasciviousness of any depiction of “post-pubescent female breasts.” 720 ILCS 5/12B-10(e). While
Miller
reaffirmed the “contemporary community standards” test, the entire point of the
Miller
third prong is to free individuals from the possibility of prosecution solely on the basis of widely divergent local standards.
See Ashcroft,
These deficiencies are sufficient for this court to conclude that the statute is not narrowly tailored and is overbroad. It is unnecessary for the State to ban access to material that has serious social value for minors to achieve its stated purpose.
But even if we found no inherent problems in the SEVGL’s “sexually explicit” definition, the statute could still not survive strict scrutiny because the plaintiffs have identified other less restrictive alternatives to the SEVGL. Most obviously, the State could have simply passed legislation increasing awareness among parents of the voluntary ESRB ratings system.
Cf. 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island,
The Supreme Court has indicated that “[w]hen plaintiffs challenge a content-based speech restriction, the burden is on the Government to prove that the proposed alternatives will not be as effective as the challenged statute.”
Ashcroft,
D. Constitutionality of the SEVGL’s Labeling, Brochure and Signage Provisions
The State also appeals the district court’s ruling that the SEVGL’s. labeling, brochure and signage provisions constitute compelled speech in violation of the First Amendment. As the Supreme Court recently observed, some of its “leading First Amendment precedents have established the principle that freedom of speech prohibits the government from telling people what they must say.”
Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
However, the First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom from “compelled speech” is not absolute. Particularly in the commercial arena, the Constitution permits the State to require speakers to express certain messages without their consent, the most prominent examples being warning and nutritional information labels. See,
e.g., Nat’l Elec. Mfrs. Ass’n v. Sorrell,
The question that we must answer is whether the SEVGL’s labeling and signage requirements are compelled speech in violation of the Constitution or simply requirements of purely factual disclosures. The State argues that all of these provisions are like the mercury disclosure requirements in
Sorrell. See Sorrell,
Applying strict scrutiny, we cannot say that the “18” sticker is narrowly tailored to the State’s goal of ensuring that parents are informed of the sexually explicit content in games. As we described above, the State has not demonstrated that it could not accomplish this goal with a broader educational campaign about the ESRB system.
Cf. Riley,
Similarly, we must conclude that the SEVGL’s signage and brochure requirements are unconstitutional. Careful consideration of what the signs and brochures are in fact communicating reveals that the message is neither purely factual nor un
*653
controversial.
See Zauderer,
We also note that the signage requirement is victim to the same overreaching as the labeling requirement with regard to the size of the prescribed sign. The SEVGL requires all retailers to maintain three signs in the store — one within five feet of the games, one at any existing information desk, and one at the “point of purchase.” See ILCS 720 § 5B-30. The signs must each have “dimensions of no less than 18 by 24 inches.” Id. Many video game stores are as small as one room in an indoor mall. Little imagination is required to envision the spacing debacle that could accompany a small retailer’s attempt to fit three signs, each roughly the size of a large street sign, into such a space. We think that this deficiency reflects the narrow tailoring failure of the entire signage and brochure scheme, and we agree with the district court that it is unconstitutional.
III. CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although the defendants have filed separate briefs, their arguments are identical except where noted.
.The ratings include EC (early child), E (everyone), E10+ (for those over age ten), T (teen), M (mature — for those over 17), and AO (adults only). Under the ESRB video games are also labeled with content descriptors such as "strong sexual content.” The SEVGL includes an affirmative defense for retailers charged with violation of the prohibition against selling to minors that bars prosecution unless the rating of the game was M or AO.
. Although the State argues that the trial implicated only the WGL, it seems plain to us that the trial implicated both the WGL and the SEVGL.
. The district court also rejected the argument of the State's Attorney of Cook County, appellant Richard A. Devine, that he was immune from suit. It appears that the State’s Attorney has now abandoned this argument as his brief only adopts the arguments of Governor Rod Blagojevich’s brief.
.
. In the district court the State argued that rational basis scrutiny was applicable, but it has abandoned this argument on appeal.
. The plaintiffs' compelling interest argument seems to conflate the narrow tailoring and compelling interest inquiries. Their brief argues that "to withstand strict scrutiny, the State must demonstrate that it has a compelling interest in attaching criminal penalties to video game expression that has such serious value for minors.” The State has articulated its purpose in enacting the statute — our compelling interest inquiry would focus on whether that articulated purpose is "compelling,” but this question has already been answered in the affirmative by the Supreme Court.
.Hereinafter, "AAMA.”
. The two other prongs of the
Miller
test for obscenity did not substantially alter the Court’s prior jurisprudence, providing specifically that material was obscene if "the average person, applying contemporary community standards would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest” and "the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law.”
See Miller,
. The State cites
Denver Area Educational Telecommunications Consortium v. FCC
as a case in which a regulation survived constitutional inquiry despite lacking the third
Miller
prong.
. This portion of Reno addressed the ACLU's argument that the statute was unconstitutionally vague. The reasoning is equally applicable to the narrow tailoring analysis.
. The district court included a discussion of whether the SEVGL was unconstitutionally vague in its strict scrutiny discussion. We feel it unnecessary to reach the vagueness question in this appeal.
. The face of a standard DVD box (the most common format for the games in question) is 7.5" by 5.5".
