ubuysa
The BSOD Doctor
I don't game, as most of the regulars here already know, I'm also past pensionable age, something else most regulars know too. That means that I have never been into the gaming culture, although I do understand the excitement and the attraction. What led me to post this was this comment in another thread on here...
Does this kind of thing happen a lot to gamers? Are games so immersive that you often lose all track of real time?
And if so, does it worry you at all?
When you get the wrong side of your pensionable age time becomes quite precious and whilst I understand the enjoyment in gameplay I can't help but wonder whether you're missing out on a big chunk of real life right at the ages when you can make the best use of that time?
I'm not knocking gaming at all, I'm trying to understand how serious gamers, who are clearly also very smart people (at least those I've met on here are), manage the time they spend gaming with the time they spend interacting with real people and real life. I suppose I could also say the same about social media, it seems that people spend much more time interacting on social media than they do interacting face to face in the real world.
Are we in danger of creating a world where people can only interact online or where their preferred version of reality is only in a game? If that's true does it worry any of you at all?
I well remember from my youth in the 60's that my parents were completely out of touch with the world in which we (the young) then lived. I now find that I'm completely out of touch with the online and gaming world in which today's young live (and by young I mean anyone under 40). I remember how my parent's generation fought against the 60's 'youth culture' and I certainly don't want to do that here, it's your world now and you make of it what you will, but I am interested to understand whether you think that more and more time spent online (in social media) and more and more time spent gaming is a good thing both for you as individuals and for society as a whole?
Discuss.
Thought I would have a wee after dinner game at 6.30ish. Took the headset off, it was pitch black and after 11 o clock. I got completely lost. The only reason I took the headset off was because the controllers ran out of charge
Does this kind of thing happen a lot to gamers? Are games so immersive that you often lose all track of real time?
And if so, does it worry you at all?
When you get the wrong side of your pensionable age time becomes quite precious and whilst I understand the enjoyment in gameplay I can't help but wonder whether you're missing out on a big chunk of real life right at the ages when you can make the best use of that time?
I'm not knocking gaming at all, I'm trying to understand how serious gamers, who are clearly also very smart people (at least those I've met on here are), manage the time they spend gaming with the time they spend interacting with real people and real life. I suppose I could also say the same about social media, it seems that people spend much more time interacting on social media than they do interacting face to face in the real world.
Are we in danger of creating a world where people can only interact online or where their preferred version of reality is only in a game? If that's true does it worry any of you at all?
I well remember from my youth in the 60's that my parents were completely out of touch with the world in which we (the young) then lived. I now find that I'm completely out of touch with the online and gaming world in which today's young live (and by young I mean anyone under 40). I remember how my parent's generation fought against the 60's 'youth culture' and I certainly don't want to do that here, it's your world now and you make of it what you will, but I am interested to understand whether you think that more and more time spent online (in social media) and more and more time spent gaming is a good thing both for you as individuals and for society as a whole?
Discuss.
Last edited: