The Family That Games Together Online 84
GamerDad has a piece talking about families gaming together online. The article profiles some gamer families. Brian Reynolds, CEO of Big Huge Games, is cited as an example; He games together with his sons. The article also touches on the more serious issues of addiction and quality time. From the article: "Another hidden benefit to online games is that families spread over several states can keep in touch and play online together. Thompson agrees, 'I never foresaw how important the games online would become, but I did actually get a line added into my divorce decree that guaranteed me three days a week that I could get on the computer with my kids, via web cam. So I could communicate and see them. At the time, I wasn't a huge MMORPG player, so I didn't envision the role it would play.'"
"Cmon dad, let's mug that NPC!" (Score:2, Funny)
Me and my Father... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Me and my Father... (Score:1)
Makes it a lot quicker keeping your characters up to date.
Re:Me and my Father... (Score:2)
YOU HEAR THAT, BRIAN, YOU LITTLE PANSY???
-Eric
Re:Sad (Score:2)
Re:Sad (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Sad (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sad (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Sad (Score:1)
Re:Sad (Score:1)
Re:Sad (Score:3, Insightful)
It's sad that mmorpg gaming counts as "quality time" with their family for some people.
I play World of Warcraft with my brother, who lives 850 miles away. It's either that or talking on the phone. At least in the game we can not only chat, but "do" something together. My wife also plays. While we don't count that as quality time together, it is just one more activity that we do together to have fun. Hell, our son even joins in sometimes. Just about all he can do is mash the keyboard to make our guys do r
divorces (Score:3, Interesting)
I think we're going to be seeing a lot more of this in divorce papers. Especially if the parent with the kids moves across the country, such that personal visits are not practical.
On a related note, restraining orders are probably going to start having sections on internet contact, if they don't already. "I never came within 1000 yards of her, officer." "but you harassed her 4 hrs a day on AIM, off to jail"
Re:divorces (Score:1)
Still... I agree, eventually it'll become a problem. Of course the real problem is the accep
Re:divorces (Score:2, Insightful)
There's absolutely nothing wrong with "divorce", per se. It's getting divorced once you have kids involved that is a problem.
It could certainly be argued that a large contributing factor to the high divorce rate is the [Christian] church's insistence upon marriage before sex. This has almost undoubtedly rushed many people into marriage who just don't want to wait any long
Re:divorces (Score:2)
Re:divorces (Score:2)
Re:divorces (Score:4, Funny)
You are not permitted to come within __one_subnet___ of ____her_name____.
Re:divorces (Score:1)
Re:divorces (Score:2)
First, every restraining order already has a section against "contacting". After all, tele-harassement is an old issue and if it's done by phone or by IM is no difference.
Second, do not solve with law what can be solved easily otherwise. Seriously. In most IM apps, you can simply block someone, so the law should not intervene. If someone doesnt block me on IM, I take this as an invitation to chat with him, restraining order or
Games and divorce? (Score:2, Insightful)
And that's supposed to be a good thing? I think it's just sad.
I know I'm pointing out the obvious, but perhaps he had spent more time with the family and less time gaming he wouldn't be divorcing and could be more than a face on the webcam or a guild member.
Yeah, so I'm judgemental. At least you'll get over
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:5, Interesting)
So one thing to take from this story is that sometimes good husbands and fathers are given a raw deal only because their wives are terrible people and they made a bad judgment to marry.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:3, Interesting)
You don't travel much, do you? (Score:3, Informative)
One flight in an airplane w/a squalling infant who takes a dump 3 minutes into takeoff will have you reading Swift's Modest Proposal as a How-To guide.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
I dunno about grandparent, but if you're USian, I now completely agree with him.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
God I hope you're kidding.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2, Insightful)
(I really shouldn't feed the trolls, but this one is a little too good to pass up.)
Your plan is really quite fascinating, but it has a couple little kinks that will have to be worked out before you put it before Congress/Parliament/etc.:
1. It is inherently unfair. Suppose Citizen A is a single, employed man. Citizen B is an unemployed, "deadbeat dad" with 6 children. Why should Citizen A be forced to pay a monetary
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2, Insightful)
If I had suggested such a thing, it would have been a foolish and unprovable claim. It would also be foolish to suggest, as you are doing, that teenagers are entering the workforce to provide some intangible benefit to "society". They are already being compensated for the benefit that they provide.
If the parents do a good job, they too are rewarded for their years of labor spe
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Oh wait, society climbed out of the dark ages DESPITE people doing that.
Yes, much technology has been developed with government money. Mostly, it was developed to more efficiently coerce or kill people. The non-military benefits were mostly afterthoughts.
The government does so many other things right
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Well, that's the way insurance works. You pay $X per year, even though you have no accidents. All the $X add up to pay for Mr. Jones, who forgot to check in his mirror, and ended causing $100,000 of damage in a pile-up. The principle is that some day *you* may be that Mr. Jones. Same with having kids. Whatev
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Whatever your situation now, you may have kids some day. And their well being and health shouldn't depend totally on your attitude towards investment and your career.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Either that, or forcibly sterilise people deemed to be unfit parents, but I don't think we want to be going down that rout
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
In a nutshell... (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Or moves to the tropics and gets freaky deaky with the locals
Either way, life's problems have solutions, but the biggest problem of them all is apathy.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:4, Interesting)
He didn't start gaming until AFTER the divorce. Most likely either he, or his wife moved and the wife maintained custody. He could have been the best father ever, and the divorce could have been amicable, but if he or his x-wife moved across the country you can't honestly expect him to commute 2500 miles for 4 hours 3 nights a week. Sitting in front of a web cam for 4 hours a night talking to your father could get rather boring for a child. Why not spend an hour talking about life, then playing a game together? Seems like a perfectly good way to hang out with a child from across the country.
-Rick
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Says he didn't MMO much. Doesn't say he didn't game. Though I agree there may have been an element of neglect but it was probably more to do with being a CEO than with being a gamer.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
then later: "Thompson agrees, 'I never foresaw how important the games online would become... I wasn't a huge MMORPG player..."
The quote in questions is from Thompson, the divorce', not Reynolds.
-Rick
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:1)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2, Insightful)
He did mention that this was before the MMOGs hit so big.
You do have to admit that his seeing his kids via webcam is better than not seeing them at all. At least he's still involved.
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't get to see my kids every single day. Technically, I'm supposed to be able to talk to my kids every single day on the phone. In actuality, I get to talk to the answering machine 4 times out of every five that I call.
My kids are a little too young to play online with me. But in only a year or two, my daughter will be ready to play games. She knows my MMORPG of choice. I'll happily pay her membership. It will be just one more option that we can use to communicate.
It's one more tool a
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Some fathers have no choice but to work away from home for long periods of time. I know oil workers who had to work two weeks onshore and two weeks offshore. Others work in the merchant navy and have to spend months away from home. Then there are long distance truck drivers, contractors, the armed forces, airline
Re:Games and divorce? (Score:2)
Remember, party-approved ocupations are limited to watching TV, attending church and hunting qua
And what evidence do you have? (Score:2)
Especially if the parent with the kids moves across the country
In other words, it's better than nothing. There's nothing to indicate that the man didn't spend time with his family, but rather perhaps he and his family are now some distance away, which means at times he would be otherwise unable to see/talk to them in person.
I chat with my GF on MSN and webcam almost daily. On weekends when I can I drive 4h to see her. Neither one is exclusive of the other, but as she lives 4
Obligatory World of Warcraft forums quote (Score:5, Funny)
My experiences (Score:4, Funny)
Until he signed up for WoW, we rarely ever spoke, even though we both miss each other very much.
Now that I've added him to my guild, he won't leave me the hell alone. I've learned to hate my family now, they're all ninka looters. FuXin n00b.
Gaming with family (Score:3, Insightful)
He is now 16 and we are playing EQ2 together. There have been a couple of other MMORPGs in between.
Before that though, we gamed on consoles and I introduced him to PC games at an early age.
Gaming together, and play in general, is something all parents should do with their children. My son and I are much closer than we might have been, and definitely gotten some deeper insight into each other.
Playing an RPG like EQ or WoW, gives a young person a chance to exercise their personal skills in a variety of settings, being their with him/her gives a parent a chance to mentor, observce and assist.
As for the insight part, my son and I play totally differently in some areas. Grouping up, we learn how the other thinks about things, like fair play, how to treat others, and prioritizing.
That sad, game play is no substitute for good parenting. So, if you're excuse for not spending any other time with yoiur family is that you play EQ together....well, you read the article.
Laters,
Tojosan
Obligatory SW reference (Score:2)
But seriously, it makes me wonder if one-on-one mentoring wouldn't go better in a more controlled two-player way than in an MMO. There are so many bad influences, and they're so contagious. Ranging from "let's go over the mountain and gank alliance newbies in Northshire" or "let's roll undead chars and camp the zones
I'm hesitant. (Score:4, Funny)
Those NES pads had some corners, I tellya what..
Re:I'm hesitant. (Score:2)
Let's just hope the PS3 boomerang is given some serious thought..
Dear God, Please won't someone think of the the children?!
Don't do this. (Score:1)
Talk about awkward.
On the plus side, her mum likes me without having met me. Boy is she in for a surprise.
On a side note, one of my guildmates started playing together with his son. The son's moved on, the father hasn't.
Re:Don't do this. (Score:4, Funny)
No shit.
On the plus side, her mum likes me without having met me.
Eh?........ Oh, computer games, I get it.
I play StarCraft with my 4 year old. (Score:4, Informative)
I wrote about how she used to play the Terrans on my blog [taoriver.net] a while back.
If I'm lost in online stuff, I hear: "C'mon daddy, it's time to play StarCraft."
Re:I play StarCraft with my 4 year old. (Score:2)
Great story.
Re:I play StarCraft with my 4 year old. (Score:2)
Re:I play StarCraft with my 4 year old. (Score:2)
The Family That Games Together... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The Family That Games Together... (Score:2)
don't you mean MAMEs together?
Re:The Family That Games Together... (Score:1, Redundant)
Couldn't resist.
Family Games (Score:2)
My wife and I play Jeopardy on the computer from time to time. It is one of the few games we both really like to play.
My friend and her husband do WoW online as a family. That's kinda wierd, but they enjoy it.
Another buddy and his son make a big deal of playing Star Wars Galactic Battlegrounds (if he's been good) or Heroes of Might and Magic IV.
My son is not quite 2 yet, but
Re:Family Games (Score:2)
We like a hearty deathmatch after dinner, helps us all sleep a little better.
Re:Family Games (Score:1)
Good call (Score:1)
Says it all (Score:1)
Time? (Score:1)
But the members of my family have really no time for playing a MMORPG. So could someone suggest a funny and interesting browser game which brings a group of people (family, collegues, etc.) together and requires not much time? Additionaly it should have a very easy interface in order to let the less computerized family members also enjoy it.
In most of the games, you are alone against everyone o
We don't need computer games (Score:1)
Obligatory penny arcade link (Score:2)
I've played games on various platforms with my wife since the day we met (WoW, Mario Kart, Quake, etc). She wasn't really into games before we met, but now she comes to LAN parties with me.
However, I have a job, and she stays at home with the kids. She can play when they nap. All I can say is that there's some serious truth to that comic.
Gaming together (Score:1)
Sometimes its weird like going to your teenage kid and saying, "Yo, get your butt onto WoW so your Pally can tank for us in Scarlet Monastary." "But dad, I was talking to my girlfriend on the phone......" "C'mon, hurry