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Role Playing (Games)

New Issue of the Daedalus Project 10

Nick Yee's seminal Daedalus Project has released a new issue. Topics covered in this release include MMORPG Hours vs. TV Hours, Transfers of Stereotypes into virtual worlds, and a look at the virtual police state. As always a new issue means a new round of tracking on the Daedalus Survey, so if you're a MMOGamer go answer some questions. From the Television article: "MMORPG gamers spend on average 21.0 hours per week playing the game (N = 1996), and spend on average 7.7 hours per week watching TV (N = 1996). The national average for TV watching per week is around 28, which is what the above averages add up to. In other words, this lends support to the claim that time that was spent watching TV has been displaced by MMORPG playing." Commentary on Terra Nova.
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New Issue of the Daedalus Project

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  • I find it very strange indeed that many assume that online communities are free from prejudice, murder, theft...free from any of the vices, crimes, and atrocities that occur in the real world. These are still human beings playing with and against other human beings. Why would an online community be any different from an offline community?
    • I don't get it either. In fact, it makes sense to me that online communities would be *more* prone to antisocial behavior because of the shield of anonymity and because of the general lack of oversight by authority figures (i.e., weak or no law enforcement).

    • hehe... In my prefered mmorpg (eve online) they have black market items, piracy as an accepted trade, smuggling as a skill you can train up, and you can put bounties on people's heads you don't like (with the limitation that the police don't like them either). You can have your corp declare war on another corp, then anything goes even in front of the police between the two corps. They even have situations where you are given missions BY the cops to aquire illegal items for them. It's just like the real
  • And why shouldn't it be TV watching being replaced by MMORPGs? I think most people would agree with me that although there is some educational content on TV, most of it is utter rubbish. Far better, then, to spend some time interacting with your choice of entertainment.

I cannot conceive that anybody will require multiplications at the rate of 40,000 or even 4,000 per hour ... -- F. H. Wales (1936)

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