Posted on 10/02/2004 7:45:33 PM PDT by qam1
Its very, very naughty to throw a hand grenade at an ambulance.
I long for the days when I could massacre the undead in video games and not worry about corrupting myself or society. But wait who am I kidding? The controversy over violence in video games is far older than most people realize.
From 1976s Death Race, to Mortal Kombat in 1992, to the 2001 release Grand Theft Auto III and beyond, the controversy pesters whenever over-anxious parents, watchdog groups and legislators are looking for an easy basket against moral corruption. In all the hubbub, these arguments have missed a fundamental question: What ever happened to the children that first played violent video games?
Its been more than 25 years since the Atari 2600 mainstreamed the industry and 20 years since the original Nintendo. The granddaddy of violent video games, Mortal Kombat, is already a tween. Countless violent video-game playing children have grown up to be adults. Has anyone sat down and looked at whats become of these children?
I know I was curious, so I sought them out. It ends up theyre everywhere. Starting at my law school, it turns out many fondly recall finishing opponents with blood-soaked vengeance in Moral Kombat II. Over in the Medical School, I found students who, when not learning how to preserve life, routinely gather to dissect each other with bullets in Halo. Heck, I even spoke to members of law enforcement who passionately enjoy carjacking vehicles in Grand Theft Auto.
Whats going on here? Not one was in prison for murder, arson or even tax evasion! Many scoffed at the thought of even owning a gun.
Ive observed sizable numbers of doctors, lawyers, junior executives, political consultants and many other young professionals who play or have played violent video games to some extent in their lives. Werent these the same kids who were supposedly being corrupted by video games? Yet here they are, taking up the mantle of leadership in society. Might these be mere games and not devious engines of social corruption?
Yet, just the other day, the British Broadcasting Corp. continued the rage against the video-game machines, citing games where players murder their opponents in games such as Doom III (omitting that their opponents are ghouls, but Ill hold off on that issue). They even awoke the classic anti-video game argument, that mimicry encouraged people such as the Columbine shooters.
Hmm Did I just not understand Columbine? Two unholy sociopaths shoot up their school, and it was because of their video games? As though playing violent video games made them in any way different from any other teenage male for the last 25 years? It seems as though violent video games are an easy answer for those whove never played them.
What is it thats happening in this handful of marginal cases? Are these instances of people being morally corrupted by video games, or morally corrupt people who happen to play video games? Why not just point these arguments at all media, including movies and books?
To a much lesser extent, they are, but because video games are still a relatively new medium, they bear the brunt of worse misconceptions. After all, even holy books are interpreted to mean vile and terrible things (just look at Brother Jed) video games are no different (and in the case of the Bible, no less violent).
Still, I have hope. As each generation of gamers gets older, we will hopefully carry this same understanding to our own children: Just because you shoot some zombies on the Play Station 2, doesnt mean youre going to shoot people at your high school, reality and fiction are separate, and its very, very naughty to throw a hand grenade
A few years ago the Sony FD Series monitors were pretty much the best you could buy. I have a GDM-F500R that is a 21" flatscreen with 0.22mm dot pitch and very good convergence and focus out to the corners. It has served me well.
But... That was a few years ago...
If you want a game with more teamwork (though less realism) Natural Selection (a free mod for Half-Life) is awesome.
GTA:SA? Considering I lived my whole life in LA during the 90's, it really is fun to think they made a game patterned after 90's Cali. The drugs, the drive-bys, the gang wars. If you check some of the euro forums on GTA, they love the game because europe is actually to boring for GTA. They admittedly love America and it's image (projected by games and hollywood) and cant imagine GTA coming to Europe: no guns, no freedom.
There is only 3 weeks left until the game is out. I cant wait!!!!
Music to my ears....thanks. I still pay Doom2 with the Doom95 launcher.
Blue owns all the power nodes with a Levi camped at the last node, ugh, hate when that happens (If I'm on the other team)
Maybe it's psycho-B$, but I think that violent video games are a good thing.
Aryss clipped Player's head off in a Manta.:)
Aryss: Right between the eyes!
My nephew was playing a game called Driv3r yesterday. It was kind of funny to watch.
I just turned 35, and I'm a video game junky for sure! The more violent the better, as far as Im concerned. Somehow, through all that, I never lost touch with reality and went on a killing spree. I even keep a close eye on my guns, lest they jump up and start hosing down a playground.
Or if they actually released their games instead of making up excuses like "a hacker stole the code"
That's why dawn is my favorite map. It remains a back-and-forth fight for longer since the game isn't effectively over as soon as one team gets a solid hold on the last node.
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