Gamers Aren't (Always) Geeks 338
wo1verin3 writes "CNN is reporting that not all gamers are the anti-social folk they are hyped to be by parents and the media. Roughly two-thirds of college students play video games, but the image of a nerdy guy who spends all day in a dimly lit room blowing up computer-generated bad guys is off base, according to a new study. Full story here."
They socialize with other gamers (Score:3, Funny)
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Informative)
Re:and like - shock horror... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:and like - shock horror... (Score:2)
Don't belive me? Look at the kid [cnn.net] in the picture.
Re:and like - shock horror... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Insightful)
Every Lan party I've ever been to, an hour into the gaming, even the normal gamers are addicted.
It is just fun to play a competitive game with friends. Especially when you don't have to run or jump to do so. It's pretend!
Girls also have a realistic chance to be competitive. Stupid starfall.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:3, Funny)
Oh I'm sorry, by normal I meant hardcore.
Not only did I not read the article, I didn't read the title.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Insightful)
Those people are not what I call a "gamer" - they just happen to enjoy spending some time playing computer games, but computer games are not the dominant activity in their lives.
The problem is when you become addicted and sit in front of your computer all day.
I'm not sure if that alone is the problem - to me it's more the people who do this to the exclusion of going out and seeing people (non-gamers!) face-to-face in the real world (and I don't mean at LAN parties). I suppose it's like anything that has the potential to be addictive.
The real difference (and danger I guess) is that it is entirely possible to create another world and not have to interact with anyone through gaming, effectively withdrawing themselves from society - most other activities don't have this "potential".
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Insightful)
What is wrong with meeting people at lan parties?!
Or BBS gatherings. Or Chess clubs. or any other perceived geek gathering place?
There is nothing wrong with it. You just dismiss it because it isn't the way that you would meet people.
Science Fiction conventions, and model airplanes, tis the life for I!
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a number of friends who I occasionally see in the really real world who I talk to online all the time, and who I got to know online before I ever met them. Their behavior online is well-representative of how they act in meatspace, as is mine.
I met my girlfriend, who is not a computer geek (though she is fairly competent in the use of computers and the internet) through an instant messenger. I love her, and we are very happy together. If that's pathetic, then you can stick your whole social scene up your mainstream ass, America. What am I supposed to be doing, going to church meetin's? Picking up chicks in the produce section, making eyes at her over the broccoli? (I know that's hard to do because the broccoli is usually off against the wall, but please, grant me a measure of suspension of disbelief.)
One nice thing about the internet is that it's inexpensive. I get enjoyment out of my high-speed internet access every day. I am exposed to people and media that I would otherwise never have had a chance to experience, and it only costs me $720 a year. That's not enough even to take a serious vacation. It doesn't stop me from doing things outside, either, we go camping more or less year round and go on walks and drives and so on, but even if we didn't, what's wrong with that? Some people are simply more comfortable behind their computer, and there's nothing wrong with those people. Well, not all of them, anyway.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:5, Insightful)
If I am not mistaken this is what adjectives were made for. "Avid Gamer" "Obsessed Gamer" IMHO, the fringe should not define the majority. The CNN story simple states that not all people who play games are anti-social geeks who do not interact with the greater society outside of LAN parties and online chat.
My clan has an architect who surfs, a storm chaser, a cop who is an angler, a psychiatrist, mothers, fathers, and even a grandfather in addition to the programmers and sysadmins. You don't have to be a full time hermit to be a gamer.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2)
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:3, Funny)
So... (Score:5, Insightful)
Excuse me, but what is your point? Golfers hang out with other golfers, quilters hang out with other quilters, runners hang out with other runners...
Anyone with a hobby, likely socializes with others who have the same hobby.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2)
Okay, the women might be stretching it.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2, Funny)
One girl I knew at college (Score:2)
Drunken gaming was VERY common at school.
Re:One girl I knew at college (Score:2)
Drunken gaming was VERY common at school.
Only to prove how good you really were. Getting stoned and playing a mind numbing game like golf with friends, yes.
But not drinking.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2)
Of course, you might say that since almost everyone was a "gamer" (even people without computers), they socialised mostly with gamers, but that would still make your point rather moot. I guess in
Think about this... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why are you knocking Ray Charles? The man plays piano without his eyes. You probably can't play piano with your overrated hand-eye coordination. I'm certain that if there was a way to convert different areas of a game screen into audio, he'd kick your ass at hockey.
Since you are severely analogy-challenged, perhaps you should stick to simpler language like, "all of them have poor hand-eye coordination."
But this is /.--a place where some geeks act out on their desire to be cool.
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2, Funny)
A/S/L?
Re:They socialize with other gamers (Score:2)
Pictured Above, Right: Not a Geek (Score:3, Insightful)
Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:3, Informative)
I was a Quaker at the time but quickly picked up on Madden. Quake was great but too much garbage was beginning (botting, 12 year olds spamming the messsages, etc). Consoles brought a group of guys together in one location and was quite a bit more fun than sitting in my dorm room huddled over my computer w
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:5, Funny)
Geez, you people sure do take your games seriously. What was the conversion like? Did you have to be baptized again?
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:5, Interesting)
The difference is that, although they played them heavily, none of them would have dreamed of subscribing to a gaming magazine or going to a LAN party or gaming event.
Point being, the gamers that we tend to call "hard-core" are the ones who look to video games to provide them with a social life or community of friends through things such as mailing lists, on-line forums and even live events. These are the gamers who are almost inevitably "geeks".
The gamers who are the "cool kids" see gaming as something that they do for fun but which isn't really an important part of their life. They see it this way because they get their social life and sense of community from other things such as sports, fraternities or concerts.
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:5, Funny)
And the only reason we let them play is because we kick their asses.
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Quite a few gamers in college... (Score:4, Interesting)
And these jocks were hardly 3-4 hrs a week. A couple of hours every other day is more in keeping with their schedule.
Of course... our football team really sucked. Hmm... coincidence?
Re:Consoles == Masturbation (Score:4, Interesting)
Thats a ridiculous distinction.
Sure, the highest end computer wargames are more complex than the highest end console games, but the popular games on both are at the same level.
Its not 1989 anymore, PC games are no longer aimed at sn audience that is comprised of well educated programmers.
Yay! (Score:2, Funny)
but the image of a nerdy guy who spends all day in a dimly lit room blowing up computer-generated bad guys is off base
Take THAT, mom! *goes back to GTA:VC in my darkened room
Duke Nukem 4-0 - balder, fatter (Score:4, Funny)
Looks like middle age hasn't been kind to action hero Duke Nukem. In a prerelease press preview, presented by Joe Siegler, the studly hero is bald with a huge beer-gut. "We wanted to flesh out the character of Duke", Siegler said, "we want to make him more a character that his fans can directly relate to".
In the new title, Duke is in a custody dispute with his ex-wife. Apparently, since he lost his job, he's in arrears on his child-support payments. When his (alien) wife kidnaps their kids and leaves for her mothers on Vega VII, it's butt-kicking time!
Ouch... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ouch... (Score:5, Insightful)
Dude, seriously, there is a limit to everything.
I like playing games, probably spend an hour a day in average (I sometimes play an entire weekend, bringing up the average quite a bit). However, I am not the least proud of it, nor does it bother me. I do it because I think its fun, and I don't let it become my identity, which it appears is what you have done.
My opinions anyways...
Re:Ouch... (Score:2)
This is the only news story I want duped on a daily basis.
Also send a copy to several of my ex-girlfriends.
"Hell hath no fury like a woman's scorn for Sega." - Brodie
Newsflash (Score:5, Funny)
Not that I look at porn. I'm not suggesting that. Oh no.
Even some girls like porn. A girl told me. Well, a friend who knows a girl told me.
Another newsflash: (Score:5, Funny)
Pr0n is a multi-billion dollar industry (Score:4, Insightful)
hahahaha!
Re:Newsflash (Score:2, Funny)
whatever (Score:3, Interesting)
yes there are lots of non geeks who play video games. but all the people who i know who are "gamers" do spend their days in dimly lit rooms, not showering, and eating crap all day.
the non geeks play gran turismo for an hour or so while chilling with a few friends on a lazy day. don't deny the existance of geeky gamers. they created the stereotype because of the truth.
Re:whatever (Score:2)
We shower between 8 hour sittings, thank you very much.
Comparison study... (Score:2, Interesting)
I disagree. (Score:3, Informative)
That was the tech field. In other fields I find that casual gamers fair better in many cases than non-gamers
Re:I disagree. (Score:2)
I would agree with that, except that it is the YOUNG people in tech who are the gamers. All of the people over 30 in tech that I have worked with are totally non-gamers. I, OTOH, am under 30 (25) and haven't played a video game for more than 1 hour (maybe once a week, usually less) in years.
I've never been into games, I find them to be a waste of my time(*) -- m
Hmmm (Score:5, Interesting)
And here I thought they were just playing out their latent desire to be coordinated.
Uh oh... (Score:2, Funny)
Obvious (Score:5, Funny)
We all know daytime is for posting on
Re:Obvious (Score:2)
and the afternoon is for 4 hours trying to lan everyone's frickin machine together.
guh!
Yes, we believe you, mass-media (Score:4, Insightful)
Different points of view are important for progress in technology and science. It's absolutely vital that we continue to nourish the development of the nerdy kid in the dimly lit basement playing Star Wars galaxies. It's more valuable to have him focus on this activity than to obtain social skills that will just hamper him in the pursuit of his research once he completes his post-graduate degree.
I say, bring back the pale geek! Cherish him! Protect him! Buy him the latest Everquest expansion pack! But do not send him out in the wild where he, God forbid, has to interact with other people. They're are a precious resource and should be treated as such.
I agree: (Score:2)
Who is IBM going to hire? The smelly, snorting, pale guy who can't relate to anyone, or the equally qualified, good-looking (or at least clean/not fat), sociable, interesting guy? (Or girl.. Diction arguments will make me laugh at you.)
IT or coding skill isn't the primary factor in employment. The big fat gamer guy will smell up the office and scare vendors with his creepy rants on the art of maxing-out stats in Final Fantasy XX-II-1.4.
S
Warning, Citizen. (Score:2)
This utterance is way out of spec for a class-C biped. Please re-structure your comment for an elementary grade-4 level reader so that it may be more easily assimilated by the masses. Thank you.
And this is news? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes people: Even beautiful girls play Wolfenstein!
Re:And this is news? (Score:2)
Would you happen to know where I can procure some of those "beautiful girls"?
crazy (Score:2, Insightful)
It's obvious and scientifically verified that those who play video games are far more likely than their non-gaming piers to avoid social interaction, do poorly in school, resort to violent behavior, and lead unhealthy lifestyles (leading to problems like obesity and depression later in life).
This study shows that there exists a glimmer of hope for chronic gamer
Re:crazy (Score:2)
"[...]spinning it as if it makes gaming healthy is irresponsible[...]"
What's so unhealthy about gaming? You mention poor school performance, violent behavior, etc. -- can you back any of those up with studies?
So long as we're going on shaky claims, here's mine: I've been gaming since I was 5 or 6
I think a faith based initiative is really needed (Score:4, Funny)
It's a shame that priestly vocations have been so vilified, when many of these young "geeks" might thrive in an intellectual, all male, celibate atmosphere. I know I do my part, whenever I hear of a "LAND" party near my parish, I stop by with flyers advertising the local Mass. Sometimes I even bring in a young priest who "cut his teeth" on games like Asteroids or Space Invaders, who can better relate to these gamers.
So this "girl" I met in EverQuest... (Score:4, Funny)
groovy.
More Info (Score:5, Informative)
In other news, it has been determined that not all of the editors at Slashdot post dupes.
Missed the point. (Score:2)
Re:Missed the point. (Score:2)
Re:Missed the point. (Score:3, Informative)
Of those surveyed, 60 percent of women said they played online and computer software-based games, compared with 40 percent of men. About the same number of men and women said they played video games on PlayStation, Xbox and other systems.
platform, genre, etc... (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, the genres of games being made show that it's not just for geeks anymore. A lot more sports games, GTA3, etc.
I think the tendency for FPS and RolePlaying games to be online first, still shows the PC is home of the geek gamers (leading tech edge).
-t
Re:platform, genre, etc... (Score:2)
I don't think I ever met someone who played more Kick-Off than my buddy Yoan and me.
Could not stand any other football game, but still, please, don't ditch every sport-related as being jocks games. Have you ever tried controlling that damn ball in KickOff ? Just playing that game makes you a geek !
In other news... (Score:2)
But seriously... it took them this long to figure that out?
...but there's still hope! (Score:5, Funny)
But there's still hope! And you - yes, YOU - can make a difference!
Clearly, we've been slacking off. This article is a clarion call for all us nerdy guys who do spend all day in dimly lit rooms blowing up computer-generated bad guys, to stop reading this and get the hell back to those pimp gaming rigs we spent hours casemodding, and get back to what's important in life: fragging n00b azz!
We've got an image to uphold, dammit!
Typical College Distractions (Score:2)
Gotta say it (Score:2)
As reported by wo1verin3
Whatever. (Score:3, Insightful)
Every lan party I have ever been to has been anti-social folk. That is why we are at a lan party, and not out drinking, and sleeping with the opposite sex.
Nerdy guys, and Nerdy girls shooting each other, and vying for mines.
Since we've grown up, we are more attractive, hold better jobs, drive nicer cars, etc.
But we are still all a mangled verison of that.
and not all non-geeks party (Score:3, Interesting)
Stereotypes are there because they are perceived, whether the perceptions are actually accurate is another question. I'm the chick who hides in the kitchen at parties, (first grab at food and the company of those creative enough to be putting things together and not just consuming the results.)Not all non-geeks are living it up. They have hobbies, too, they have everyday obs
Stands to reason (Score:2)
However, the draw to computer science (and thus geekdom) is largely steeped in gaming. For example, a few years ago I returned to my high school for "career day". I was the guy who gave the talk on
This BETTER not surprise anyone (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the perception is that when you walk by the computer cluster at school, you see the kids playing Netrek and go "games are for geeks" and then you step outside and see the "jocks" playing football. What you DON'T see is everyone grabbing a beer and blowing each other up at Halo or Twisted Metal. In fact, I can think of more metal-heads and punks playing games than geeks...
The "surprise" is that CNN is surprised... (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, if you are a 40+ year old person who uses the computer only to play Solitaire and solve spreadsheets, yes, that could be surprising (the fact that most computer players are NOT geeks or recluses).
This should however come as a natural for everybody who maybe learned to type sooner than (s)he could handwrite...
The "game world" is just an extension of the real world, with several advantages (interaction possibilities, a huge potential community, somebody "available" to talk to at any given time) and disadvantages (Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what you're gonna' get (F.Gump) - never know who will be or how will be the next person you encounter and interact with).
I hope I don't need to remind anybody that information can be both a curse or a blessing, and that's what you get when you're "on-line-gaming" - sometimes too much information... It's up to you to deal with it.
In conclusion: everybody's playing, has played or will be playing...something... sooner or later. There are no limits to the categories that will play computer games.
So, stop acting surprised
On-line games are all about interaction and socual aspects, how do you expect to find somebody else playing it?
I mean, you wouldn't expect to find nuns playing American football, but you would definetely expect mathematicians playing chess...
Re:The "surprise" is that CNN is surprised... (Score:3, Insightful)
Bottom line, this is just another slow media day filler - why else would an article like this get posted? I'm sure the next story will be something insightful like, "economic status found to correlate with computer use/internet access."
Oh, great... (Score:3, Funny)
Thanks Slashdot, you ruined my day.
Creeping Doom (Score:4, Interesting)
[1] Internet has made the gaming activity less non-social over conventional games from past. I guess this is good atleast people are interacting with others instead of just "the machine"
[2] It has also made gaming more anti-social by reducing accountability through anonymous screen names and providing a means to act out fantasy irresponsibilities. ie. killing, stealing, maiming, torturing among other players. This is bad. Even if we understand this is fantasy, are we letting the dark side enjoy too much time out of its box? Nobody would call you deranged if you pulled the wings off a fly. Do it all day and I'd say its getting to you.
[2] It has made the activity more addicting due to the unpredictable nature of other player interactions, almost replacing social real life interaction.
So now they are spending the time socializing in virtual environments, when they could be with their next door neighboor in the vacinity of moms, dads, other kids, older, younger, shop owners, policemen, firefighters, accounts, doctors, garbage collectors, and any other people that might be wandering as they ride on their bike down their street.
My point being our children are growing up spending a good chunk of time in an environment where consequences are not real. And please nothing about "They know the difference between real and games". Judgement be what it is, behavior is learned. Especially when its repetitive. Everyday. For 3-5 hours a day.
Anti-social is bad? (Score:5, Interesting)
What I do not understand is why people who prefer their own company are considered somehow "broken". I do not know of any facet of human physiology which REQUIRES other human contact beyond a base desire to procreate. Why is there such a bad connotation to being anti-social?
Society itself does not need a hive mind. In fact, I would argue just as strongly that it is dangerous, irresponsible and something we all should actively try to prevent in our children. The world needs independent thinkers, people who think outside the box and come up with original solutions. People who don't let the hive mind dictate their response. Somehow I see from high school that civics classes about the glory of democracy has led people to a very wrong conclusion: that the majority is always right. That's such a horribly incorrect thought that is so pervasive (esp in MTV pop-culture) that it makes me want to lock myself in a room and slay myself with a BFG-10k.
I am hard pressed to come up with any thing the hive MIND has produced that has either been correct or somehow useful. The hive mind has historically resulted in: slavery, bigotry, religion (in the "belief in unfounded/unproven philosophy in the face of contrary evidence" sense), senseless wars, mass murder, and most horribly reality television. Let's face it, "society" is valuable only as a workforce commodity. When it comes to thinking, we're better off with Forrest Gump than any 10 people.
Why is it that those who choose to not "join in" are persecuted? I contribute to the whole, and I make it possible for us all to walk forward. I do so just as much as the next guy. I am not taking anything away by not talking to you. Even if I firmly believe that you are all incredibly stupid and not worth my time, I'm not really hurting you am I? As long as I do my job & earn my keep, I have fulfilled my obligation to others. Leave us alone.
Re:Anti-social is bad? (Score:3, Insightful)
I am fairly anti-social,
Far from it. (Score:3, Interesting)
umm... DUH! (Score:2)
old news... next!
I'll be the first to admit this... (Score:3, Insightful)
However, something good did come from it. Once you decide to stop playing CS, you honestly don't miss the crappy game, and it makes it so much easier to swear off video game addictions completely, and simply feel content with gaming only in moderation.
I just feel sorry for those of ya'll still addicted to Everquest. Unlike Half-Life (cs), that game really is junk.
study is crap. check out survey criteria (Score:2)
http://www.pewinternet.org/reports/reports . asp?Rep ort=93&Section=ReportLevel1&Field=Level1ID&ID= 400
70% of respondants reported playing games 'at least once in a while'
yeah, so everyone who picks up a controller for a quick try at nfl blitz or GTA or DOOM -OR- solitaire or a flash web game once every couple weeks is a 'gamer'.
trust me, there are still all sorts of stereotypical superdorks over here in computer gaming land. but sure, if you include casual gamers, you ge
But they are missing out on a different childhood. (Score:3, Interesting)
The next door neighbor boy spends his average summer day inside about 4 hours playing video games. He also spends a substantial amount of his allowance and money I give him to wash my car on video games. To top it off, he spends a good portion of his time thinking about video games, talking about video games, and buying/trying out video games.
In my day, we would blow an allowance in an arcade, but it just seems kids spend a lot more money and invest a lot more time into them nowadays.
In part, I think it accounts for the decline in event sales. (Termed Arena events) Kids just aren't interested as much in live action / interaction anymore. This contrasts to my childhood where going to play a video game was just that, GOING to play. Video arcades at least allowed interactions, walking, standing, and well... an event. What is eventfull about sitting on your bed?
Duh... (Score:2, Interesting)
Living Proof (Score:3, Interesting)
Meanwhile, I was the president of my junior class, and during my relationship with a very *hot* and certainly not geeky girlfriend, I had to be pretty damn careful because other girls seemed to be trying to ruin our relationship (but don't we all *think* that). All this, and the only nights I spend out are with my girlfriend and with my silicon friends. And yes, I have plenty of other friends, otherwise I wouldn't have gotten where I am now.
I've seen plenty of people balance these out. And I'm not including the people with an xbox and an n64, I'm talking about the kids who brag about their graphics cards. I admit the two conflict. During my relationship I came to a point where I decided, "You know what, I haven't been playing enough video games" and so I would stay up a couple of hours later after spending the night with her. Certainly there are the couple that feel awkward away from the flickering screen, but I've known that's a horrible generality for years
Gamers aren't geeks (Score:2, Insightful)
Damn straight! (Score:2)
Sidenote: Clarissa says it has nothing to do with any desire to challenge ourselves. They're games and they're fun, damnit.
Best Games of All Time? (Score:2)
1. Grand Theft Auto 3 + Vice City (PS2/PC)
2. Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World (SNES)
3. Perfect Dark (N64)
4. Goldeneye (N64)
5. Gran Turismo 3 (2, 1) (PS2/PS1)
Okay, you may disagree with me. I like Halo, but I don't like it more than these games. These are just my all-time favorites that I still pick up fairly regularly.
Only surprising to the ignorant! (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is why it (mildly) bugged me that the headlines for this study's results said something like "Surprising Facts About Gamers." Why should this be surprising? It's only those who never lost their narrow view of what these games are about and who plays them who are surprised - anyone who plays the games, reads about them, or looks at the people in EB could tell you that there's no one subculture surrounding them. Yes, perhaps the hardcore gamer still mostly fits the picture, but why should the extreme examples define the majority? With games moving into the mainstream in a huge way, it's damaging to the industry's and the individual gamer's image to allow these ignorant stereotypes to be perpetuated.
Just my $.02 + karma bonus. Now I'll be thinking about Jedi Knight II all day until I can get home and play it...
Female Character Problems (Score:4, Insightful)
This is something that has bothered me...well, barely bothered me, but bothered nonetheless. Why is it that almost every female video game character is, in some way, a sex object? I'd be perfectly content with playing a game that had, as a main character, a female that didn't have a rack bigger than her head. Tomb Raider immediately comes to mind.
OK, maybe a sorceress in Diablo qualifies, but you hardly get a good view of the character... Blizzard can afford to make the character unattractive because she's too small to matter. Seriously, when was the last time you played a game that had a male main character that, in another situation (ie: not shooting at bad guys), would be a sex object?
I have seen... (Score:3, Insightful)
I have seen far too many people using a game console as a surrogate babysitter and never, ever playing with their children. These people are irresponsible parents. There are far too many.
I thought... (Score:3, Insightful)
I heard the Oval Office is very well lit, and the computer-generated "bad guys" are now so realistic its hard to tell the difference between them and real people.
*rimshot*
Once met a chick from a MUD... (Score:3, Interesting)
About two years in a met a girl and hung around with her in game, and after 4 or so years, she decided that we should meet and hang out for the week, despite about a 1500-mile distance issue. She was a pretty hardcore player. Definitely consumed 15-20 hours a week of her time (I played about 10-15 in comparison).
Well, went to T.F. Green in Providence to pick her up. Just waiting around... holding up a sign with her last name on it. Then all of a sudden some attractive, blonde, Britney Spears lookalike comes up to me and hugs me shouting "Rob" quite happily.
Yeah, I'd say that the stereotype is pretty off-base!
----- ----- -----
Re:Old news (Score:2)
Mike
Re:Also on the BBC... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not all good news. From the article: (Score:5, Insightful)
It's either they were talking to the wrong people or the wrong people were responding to the survey.
I was a "gamer" since the C64 days. I was not allowed to have a console machine when I was younger (parents told me I had a computer and it played games, that was that... fair enough). I got hooked on Quake1CTF in my freshman year of college... I still went out w/my friends drinking, I was an active D1 athlete, and I was dating. I had several friends that I played CTF with that were exactly the same.
I figure that they interviewed Internet junkies or the "typical gamer" which is not interesting to the opposite sex.
I want better information on the type of individuals interviewed before we start jumping to conclusions.
Re:Not all good news. From the article: (Score:2, Informative)
This means you.
Re:Not all good news. From the article: (Score:5, Interesting)
This largely teen/early twenties group of gamers started off like any other gaming community, but they just blasted off from there. The LAN's these guys have organized have had 200-300 attendees, and they ALL KNOW EACH OTHER! Some of these kids are growing up, getting good jobs, and they're all helping each other out, staying in touch. They go out for a night of clubbing in New York -- and they bring their digital cameras to document it, and they post their pictures on the forums for others to live vicarously through them. "Pics or it didn't happen" has become a mantra there.
They help each other find apartments, sometimes even jobs, they room together, and they have LAN's whenever the urge arises.
An interesting example: one member of the TW community grew up and joined the Navy. With all of the money he's been saving, he was able to buy a beachfront house and property in the Florida Keys, all while being a 'internet geek'. He grew up, got responsible, and has more girls than he can handle (pics or it didn't happen) -- and he's a gamer geek. He's on the forums, he's playing the games. And he opened his house to ANYONE in the game community that could make it down to Florida, for a massive "Beach Party Extravaganza".
From the 35-year-old dude who wielded a claymore as UVALAN's "Security guard" (CF I think), to the people that proudly post pictures of their brand new BMW's, houses, chic 4-star restaurants, and children -- this is a community with a great proportion of thriving, economically stable, responsible people, who also happen to be part of a massive gaming subculture.
At what point do these people stop being "geeks"? At what point does the gaming "subculture" stop being "sub"?
Re:Not all good news. From the article: (Score:2)
Really from the article:
Apparently added by PhysicsGenius:
Re:of course... (Score:2)
Many people playing competitive games remain in a heightened state of awareness similar to the condition felt by atheletes during competition. The metabolic rate speeds up and more calories are burnt that when at actual rest. Also, gaming requires at least SOME movement of the hands.
Television viewers tend to regress to a state of conciousness that involves even less movement than sleep!
So while computer/video gaming isn't the