Celtic_Emperor
3rd Level White Feather
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2002
- Messages
- 9,619
- Points
- 0
ignatz01 said:Vlad is right. It's the obsession and the flight from reality that pushes one over the edge. We used to hear these sort of things about the Dungeons and Dragons board game years ago. And think of all the chess players who have gone barking mad in the last century and a half. Games are not the only siren song leading some people astray from their wits. Trekkies and celebrity stalkers are a related phenomenon. And religious fanatics.
A good, rounded education is probably the best defense you can give a kid. And I don't mean just the classroom; expose him to the world in all its variety from the very cradle...music, art, literature, sport, craft, religion, work, and play. It's when a person has essentially nothing in his head that one seductive idea can penetrate and then expand to fill all the available space.
Very well said. Many would argue that getting or trying to get your kid into too many hobbies and/or activities just to keep them busy is a bad thing (as it may cause them fatique and a mental/emotional/psycological burn-out because they feel pressured into these things, not to mention that it may be keeping them from personally growing in a way they feel comfortable with). And while that is just as much true as this topic is, its these games that are deceptively consuming. And its ironic, well, not so much ironic as it is sad, because on tv, cartoons, commericials, and even other video games they seem to be glorifying or making light of the fact people are hooked on video games like its their fix and the parents in these things are just like "oh well!", like its ok to allow their children to become warped and introverted like that.
Its like these people that make these commericials and such are acknowledging the problem is there and then laughing at it. Thats sad. Thats like laughing at this kid for pulling the trigger and blowing his brains out and laughing at the mother because now she's left without a son.
Last edited:



