Kman
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 12:01 AM)Lucke Wrote: Really? Wow, i'm suprised you actually think that o.O It depends on the persons maturity and mental state. Most 11-12 year olds would be scarred for life (or at least a few years) if they played Amnesia, I know if I had played Amnesia when I was 11 or 12 I probably would have curled up in the fetal position and started crying. Granted kids who have been exposed to that stuff already by that age might be ok with it, but that's like, 1 out of 50 kids.
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05-18-2012, 12:29 AM |
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Wooderson
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RE: Absolute Wuss
@Crank Old Man, Loving the humour
Unfortunately i'm allergic to cats so I don't dare go near them
And I suppose i've been exposed to things which weren't right for my age since I was very young thanks to my brothers and sisters being a lot older.
I just assumed most kids were the same as they always seem to have 18+ games to play and stuff.
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05-18-2012, 12:52 AM |
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Cranky Old Man
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 12:52 AM)Lucke Wrote: I just assumed most kids were the same as they always seem to have 18+ games to play and stuff. Yeah, lots of kids play all kinds of violent games, and then they grow up to become violent psychopaths who can't tell why they should respect other people, and who are attracted to violence rather than repulsed by it.
(This post was last modified: 05-18-2012, 01:29 AM by Cranky Old Man.)
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05-18-2012, 01:29 AM |
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Wooderson
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RE: Absolute Wuss
People say being exposed to it can have such affects on kids in their later life, but I think at the age of 12+ you know what is right and what is wrong.
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05-18-2012, 01:30 AM |
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Damascus Rose
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 01:30 AM)Lucke Wrote: People say being exposed to it can have such affects on kids in their later life, but I think at the age of 12+ you know what is right and what is wrong. A highly debatable subject, in more ways than one
so ill just go and eat some gum.
class A poet
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05-18-2012, 03:47 AM |
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Cranky Old Man
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 07:53 AM)Robosprog Wrote: To be honest, playing video games never affects children - nor has it.
Science says you're wrong:
- "Media Violence and children: a complete guide for parents and professionals" - Gentile, D.A. (2003)
- "The Psychology of Teen Violence and Victimization" - Paludi, M.A. (2011)
Quote:The stories on the media are just sensationalist and that guy who shot people and said he trained in a video game? He's insane anyway so I'd take anything he says with a pinch of salt. Video Game graphics are so distanced from reality, even now, that children can figure out that this isn't real.
It's not only Anders Breivik who used games as training simulators, but other shooters as well. The military has been using simulators for pilots for several decades, even when they didn't look anything near realistic, and they were only the pioneers in a wide field.
Quote:Infact, I'd say children are more aware of the brutality of violence today because video games are so soft compared to the real thing. They think that you don't really ever get badly hurt due to video games then they see their first school fight/have their first school fight and realize.
Not as long as they pick weaker targets. Especially if you use weapons, you rarely experience pain yourself.
The games teach everything but pain, though. They desensitize you towards violence and suffering, teach techniques, and conditions you with philosophies that justifies violence. To a child, a game can be a more involving parent than an actual parent.
Quote:I'd say playing a game like Amnesia could affect you if you're seven. Not the topics but just the terror you'd feel - and then you wouldn't be as easily scared in real life.
Now you're saying that it does condition you, just because now it suits you.
Quote:It is very rare for a video game to genuinely affect peoples lives and views on violence.
The whole idea behind having stories in media, is to affect the viewer in some way, and it works very well.
(This post was last modified: 05-18-2012, 09:18 AM by Cranky Old Man.)
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05-18-2012, 09:17 AM |
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Arvuti
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 12:29 AM)kman Wrote: (05-18-2012, 12:01 AM)Lucke Wrote: Really? Wow, i'm suprised you actually think that o.O It depends on the persons maturity and mental state. Most 11-12 year olds would be scarred for life (or at least a few years) if they played Amnesia, I know if I had played Amnesia when I was 11 or 12 I probably would have curled up in the fetal position and started crying. Granted kids who have been exposed to that stuff already by that age might be ok with it, but that's like, 1 out of 50 kids. I played through penumbra black plague when I was 12
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05-18-2012, 11:54 AM |
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Bridge
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 09:17 AM)Cranky Old Man Wrote: (05-18-2012, 07:53 AM)Robosprog Wrote: To be honest, playing video games never affects children - nor has it.
Science says you're wrong:
- "Media Violence and children: a complete guide for parents and professionals" - Gentile, D.A. (2003)
- "The Psychology of Teen Violence and Victimization" - Paludi, M.A. (2011)
Quote:The stories on the media are just sensationalist and that guy who shot people and said he trained in a video game? He's insane anyway so I'd take anything he says with a pinch of salt. Video Game graphics are so distanced from reality, even now, that children can figure out that this isn't real.
It's not only Anders Breivik who used games as training simulators, but other shooters as well. The military has been using simulators for pilots for several decades, even when they didn't look anything near realistic, and they were only the pioneers in a wide field.
Quote:Infact, I'd say children are more aware of the brutality of violence today because video games are so soft compared to the real thing. They think that you don't really ever get badly hurt due to video games then they see their first school fight/have their first school fight and realize.
Not as long as they pick weaker targets. Especially if you use weapons, you rarely experience pain yourself.
The games teach everything but pain, though. They desensitize you towards violence and suffering, teach techniques, and conditions you with philosophies that justifies violence. To a child, a game can be a more involving parent than an actual parent.
Quote:I'd say playing a game like Amnesia could affect you if you're seven. Not the topics but just the terror you'd feel - and then you wouldn't be as easily scared in real life.
Now you're saying that it does condition you, just because now it suits you.
Quote:It is very rare for a video game to genuinely affect peoples lives and views on violence.
The whole idea behind having stories in media, is to affect the viewer in some way, and it works very well. 1. So you are proving that sensationalist bullshit is not bullshit by citing sensationalist bullshit. Well done. No really, it is a good tactic. Videogames do affect people on a very deep level (enough to make them kill people) yes, but these people are either extremely weak-minded or legally insane. Normal, sensible people do not react this way to stimuli. If you take someone when they are an infant and train them to become murderers by playing violent video games all their life all the while telling them that it is the correct thing to do then videogames can affect people. But guess what? Videogames are not propaganda. Nobody is trying to teach anybody how to live their lives. Videogames are just another form of art that express various ideas and you are not forced to adopt those ideas to your own thinking. They simply allow you to experience that side, a side which you may not have known before, for a certain amount of time. For fuck's sake, if the child in question is playing on a console connected to a television, they are probably spending more time watching children's shows and movies learning their basic morals.
2. FPSs are nothing like real life. Even if it is realistically portrayed you leave out all of the other basic factors. Even if that person learned from a videogame that "killing people is fun" (that person is insane btw) then that person would also need to 1) purchase a weapon/weapons which takes a long time or steal a weapon which is not easy; gun control laws prohibit you from keeping the key or any ammo anywhere near the case/locker in which you keep your weapon and 2) Go to either a remote location away from all civilization (depending on where you live probably a very long drive) or a shooting range which require you to have a gun license which takes a long time to get and requires extensive screening from the police, after which you need to practice for a long time to become good at shooting and used to the effects firearms have on your body. The person in question has months or if he wants to steal a weapon running the risk of getting caught and go in totally unprepared a week at least to change his mind. Even if this crazy idea originated in a video game he must be genuinely insane to stay determined for that long. Video games do not make people insane and are not a good training regiment for mass murder.
3) Surely you must know he didn't mean people would become psychopaths because of Amnesia. He meant that it would affect them because it is terrifying.
4) See my first point. Art is not usually propaganda. It tells stories, it does not force you to agree with everything that is portrayed therein.
(This post was last modified: 05-18-2012, 02:55 PM by Bridge.)
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05-18-2012, 02:53 PM |
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Bridge
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 03:36 PM)Robosprog Wrote: This for the most part. Flight Simulator/Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2. Just saying. I'm not saying there are no realistic simulator games, just that the effects they have on you are limited to the mental in most cases. Yes you can use a joystick and it sort of feels like a real plane/helicopter but actually controlling vehicles like that in real life has some pretty heavy effects on your body. You've driven a car right? Compare your screen shaking when you hit a bump to you yourself shaking. Big difference. Shooting a gun, depending on what type it is and the shape you're in, can be very taxing on your body and FPSs in no way do or even can portray this. Therefore they are not good simulators at all.
(This post was last modified: 05-18-2012, 04:17 PM by Bridge.)
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05-18-2012, 04:16 PM |
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Datguy5
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RE: Absolute Wuss
(05-18-2012, 04:16 PM)Bridge Wrote: (05-18-2012, 03:36 PM)Robosprog Wrote: This for the most part. Flight Simulator/Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2. Just saying. I'm not saying there are no realistic simulator games, just that the effects they have on you are limited to the mental in most cases. Yes you can use a joystick and it sort of feels like a real plane/helicopter but actually controlling vehicles like that in real life has some pretty heavy effects on your body. You've driven a car right? Compare your screen shaking when you hit a bump to you yourself shaking. Big difference. Shooting a gun, depending on what type it is and the shape you're in, can be very taxing on your body and FPSs in no way do or even can portray this. Therefore they are not good simulators at all. This is just my opinion and i dont want to start war,but i think Battlefield 3 is more realistic war simulator than call of duties(I really hope this doesnt start a game war in here -.-).And i agree that there are no(atleast atm)any good simulators.
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05-18-2012, 04:48 PM |
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