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How do older people in your life view video games?

capt001capt001 Member Posts: 1 Arc User
edited May 2013 in Ten Forward
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  • starfish1701starfish1701 Member Posts: 782 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I'm more than twice your age at 40, and you can probably guess how I view them, as I play this one! :)

    When I was growing up, it was Pong, Pac Man and Space Invaders. Having a games console was a very family social experience, and when the market moved towards computers, they were seen as highly educational because some programming skill was needed to even get the thing to boot up.

    Certainly my family are very PC aware, and they just view it as a pastime like any other. My parents are Apple fanatics though. I work with three '50 somethings' as well and they all play games of some sort on their computers.

    Don't let it bother you if anyone frowns at your hobby. You don't need their permission or approval. There are some funny people out there, with some funny ideas. I just wished I had more time to play on my PC.
  • cmdrscarletcmdrscarlet Member Posts: 5,137 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    Their PoV: it's a waste of time.

    My PoV: it's fun, I'm not buying/using drugs, it's fun, I'm not ignoring "real" aspects of my life and it's fun.
  • ussultimatumussultimatum Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    capt001 wrote: »
    So what do the older people in your life think of video games?
    I am 19 and I thought that playing video games was considered a socially acceptable thing like Reading, watching television, or movies. But there are apparenty some people that are still living in the past that think that playing video games is considered a: "Waste of time".

    I recently had a teacher who thought that playing video games was a waste of time. However she thought that movies and tv shows were normal. I also think that it is funny when elders still see video games as nothing more than 'Mario' or 'Pac Man'. When in fact they are way more complex and can be far mor educational than television.

    What are your stories on this subject?


    I would say watching TV and reading trashy pulp novels are equally similar "wastes of time".

    I'd say "wasting" your time in a modern society is relative to your situation in life.

    If you are out of college, don't have a job and should be getting one to support yourself and instead you spend every waking moment in video games or similar recreation activity, yes you are most likely wasting your time.


    If you are playing video games, or watching TV, in a few spare hours a night to relax.

    Then that's just good old fashioned recreation, and playing a video game is no worse than the endless volumes of pure garbage you can watch on TV.


    Unfortunately video games still have a stigma.

    On the other hand, casual gaming like farmville, words with friends and other cheap and easy games will slowly see more and more of the general populace playing some kind of a video game.
  • capt001capt001 Member Posts: 1 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    @ first answer. I agree. I probably only game for about 3 hours from 8 to 11 PM. If I wasn't gaming or on the Internet I would probably be watching television. I have many things in life that I do so I don't find it to be that distracting. I am actually gaming less.
  • hortworthortwort Member Posts: 281
    edited April 2013
    capt001 wrote: »
    playing video games is considered a: "Waste of time".

    I'm assuming people saying that spend 20 hours a day working and 4 hours sleeping their whole lives, dying having contributed a tremendous deal to society... somehow?

    I hope they enjoy their time being a cog, sounds like a blast.
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  • hevachhevach Member Posts: 2,777 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    It's changed over the years.

    College: They all felt I should be utterly overwhelmed by the homework and not have time to waste on triviality. Dean's list? Not good enough, obviously you're slacking.
    Out of college: "Shouldn't you be at a job interview?" ("It's 10 PM." was not an acceptable answer)
    Working: "Shouldn't you be out... I don't know, looking for a better job? Giving me grandchildren before I die?"
    Now: "Oh, you're married and you own your own business, you obviously have your life together and anything you do is worthy of my respect. What's that one about?" ("That's my briefcase. For work." no longer an acceptable answer apparently)

    Now, I'm bringing home less right now than I did before going into business for myself, my wife and I lived together when I was working, but somehow I am now "together" enough that I'm allowed to pursue my own interests free of judgement.

    And that's the silly thing: The stigma isn't on gaming, but gamers, and for terrible reasons, some arbitrary qualification where you're adult enough to enjoy childish things again, like my mother-in-law's doll collection or my mother's love of vintage cartoons.

    There is one exception. My grandmother is still disappointed I stopped writing, and feels time I spend doing anything (even running my business) is time I should be spending publishing books. But I was never as good as she thought and the only thing I ever produced worth publishing was a technical manual.
  • sirokksirokk Member Posts: 990 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    capt001 wrote: »
    So what do the older people in your life think of video games?
    I am 19 and I thought that playing video games was considered a socially acceptable thing like Reading, watching television, or movies. But there are apparenty some people that are still living in the past that think that playing video games is considered a: "Waste of time".

    I recently had a teacher who thought that playing video games was a waste of time. However she thought that movies and tv shows were normal. I also think that it is funny when elders still see video games as nothing more than 'Mario' or 'Pac Man'. When in fact they are way more complex and can be far mor educational than television.

    What are your stories on this subject?

    It's all a matter of perspective from one's maturity and interests; from one's different phases of life and the way that people's perceptions change (or probably more accurately - doesn't change) as they mature. If someone is not interested in something, they will not follow it and a certain perceptions of it that may or may not be true after time. Also, as people mature their perspectives become more practical.

    Games can provide recreation, relaxation, creativity and some level of social interactions. Games also come and go.

    Everything in moderation, real life should always come first and make goals to build a good life.

    (Sorry, I am not qualified to answer your question. But thought a perspective from another "elder's" standpoint might be of help also. Not everyone thinks the same.)
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  • jonsillsjonsills Member Posts: 10,478 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I'm almost 50. Most of the older people in my life aren't thinking anything any more, unless you believe in an afterlife. :)
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  • sander233sander233 Member Posts: 3,992 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    My mother thinks video games and especially MMORPGs are a waste of time. So I ask her what she does on facebook all day.
    - "That's different," she says. "I'm socializing with my friends." :rolleyes:

    My dad used to think they're a waste of time, but then he discovered Call of Duty. Now every time I come home odds are I'll find him in the rec room with my little brother, my uncle or alone sniping zombies. :D

    (EDIT: I'm in my late 20s, they're both in their late 50s and semi-retired.)
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  • mirrorchaosmirrorchaos Member Posts: 9,844 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    im only 25 and ive been sat in front of this machine since i was 12, my first online game star trek armada 1 demo, multiplayer, what fun that was, back then it was a dialup 56k and still remember the connection noises xD the user name and password needed to access the net.

    i know this machine is a time waster and i know i should get away from it, as almost as if my life revolves around this tin can with plastic boards. but its like a form of addiction, very hard to break and when you try, you hang on even harder to keep from being thrown off the side. but nothing else in life concerns me much and money has no interest to me other then keeping it for the tax man and weekly shopping. i dont have a "life" and i dont care much, but it depends how you define what a life is.


    to my father, he considers computer games to be a colossal waste of time, to him its a "variation on a theme", when i was younger i though that was a pile of TRIBBLE, but i see its true for myself. consider games like battlefield, wolf enemy territory and cod series, its all shooters with the same basic thing but a different title as an example. same with star wars, star trek and freelancer its all based in space, it all has aliens, all has combat and politics, only difference again is the name. people are blind to this because its one of a newest release but i dont care about that as i can get the game anytime. the point is that my father said this and its true.
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  • eldarion79eldarion79 Member Posts: 1,679 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I am an adult, I stopped caring about what others think (don't tell the wife) when I got a job and started to pay for everything.

    My wife used to think it was a waste, until I told her I could be at the bars hanging out with friends, at least I am in the house. This was five years ago.
  • crusty8maccrusty8mac Member Posts: 1,381 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    Funny question. I'm 53. Of course if video games had been this advanced when I was in college, I would have flunked out.

    When I first started playing, the Enterprise looked like this: o=

    Star Wars ships looked like:

    >0<

    |-o-|

    <-o->


    Games only become a problem if you don't have a real life otherwise. There are studies that show that gamers are better problem solvers than non-gamers. I don't know if a causal link has been established.
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  • corbinwolf#9797 corbinwolf Member Posts: 565 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    crusty8mac wrote: »
    When I first started playing, the Enterprise looked like this: o=

    Star Wars ships looked like:

    >0<

    |-o-|

    <-o->

    I REMEMBER THAT! :D Now those were bloody hard games to play back in the day! lol.

    I play STO and only STO... and never thought of rationalizing it until one day where I spent nearly six hours in a row into the wee hours of the next morning and found myself being glared upon by my wife!

    Imagine her relief and happiness when she saw STO instead of what she at first feared: TRIBBLE... LOL

    STO has become my "me" time and a great way to connect with my childhood, especially the ship models. How nice to be able to fly them now!
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  • lordmalak1lordmalak1 Member Posts: 4,681 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I don't know any older peeps that don't play video games.

    ...Oh wait, I do. I'm in their Black Ops clan. They manage the records.
    :cool:
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  • capt001capt001 Member Posts: 1 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    Here is a really interesting video on game addiction.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y5RSngCFpsc

    I don't know why people who say that someone who plays games for about 3 hours would be an addict. When most films are much longer.
  • eddpoodleeddpoodle Member Posts: 2 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I am a teenager and personally it varies on who you talk to, but most of my family sees video games as just plan fun. My grandmothers probably have the most different views. One says video games rot your brain and the other plays video games on "the" Facebook all the time.
  • anazondaanazonda Member Posts: 8,399 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    capt001 wrote: »
    I recently had a teacher who thought that playing video games was a waste of time. However she thought that movies and tv shows were normal. I also think that it is funny when elders still see video games as nothing more than 'Mario' or 'Pac Man'. When in fact they are way more complex and can be far mor educational than television.

    Considering the low-grade level TV and even the news are on these days, I'd say your teacher needs a reality check.

    Videogames at least dont try to pretend to be real... They don't hide the fact that they are fiction, compared to the news that, while having a certain level of realism, present the "truth" in the manner that sells the most.

    In my family, I am pretty sure I am the only one who spends time on games... I am sure my family thinks of it as waste of time (I am 28 btw), but in the end, when I come home from work, kids are put to bed and GF is on facebook, games are the place I can go to, to clear my head and relax without having to bother with the customized reality that is TV/newspapers.
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  • abaddon653abaddon653 Member Posts: 1,144 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I'm 28 and my parents are both in their mid 50's and they both play video games. While my mom plays things like Wii and farcebook games my dad loves playing things like Duke Nukem and Doom. Getting him into some of the newer shooters is not easy though.

    P.S. Yes I spelt "farcebook" and no it was not a typo.
  • xlocutusofborgxxlocutusofborgx Member Posts: 1,376 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    So little backdrop here,

    When I was alot younger I was into video games, not to much I was more the "outside" type. It was more the odd occasion of me playing them. The good old floppy disk gaming days haha. After that little phase I was always doing something outside. Never touched a video game or watched much tv. Always finding myself playing "army" in the forest with my cousins or friends, going to school mtv dances, ect.

    Then I met this one guy and he got me hooked on mortal kombat. After that day I was glued to video games.

    My parents always thought I was very addicted to them when I hit my early 20's. I rarely went outside anymore, always doing something online with the guilds I was part of. Didnt really socialize that much eather. Guess I got my party habbits out quickly then some others my age now. My parents always tryed to pull me away from video games, always trying to get me to do something outside, like walks or something with them.

    Now 32, going on 33, its all I do now. I love video games, its my break of the "every day" and its a good stress relief for me. I still socialize, go on dates ect but for the most part Im all about video games and movies these days. And Im very proud of it :)
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  • hawkwing43hawkwing43 Member Posts: 1,701 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    An answer to older people and video games.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy1zDBW_UAw
  • cptjhuntercptjhunter Member Posts: 2,288 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I have been playing video games longer than the OP has been alive. OP, to anyone who calls your hobby " a waste of time"Know this. RP, and puzzle video games have been medically PROVEN to combat altzheimer's, and memory loss. The Wii system is used for physical therapy,Helping people regain physical ranges of motion.
    I still play video games, and it's better than gluing myself in front of the TV in the evenings.Besides, it's not like a drug habit,or other horrible vices you could be engaged in.I wish video games were as good as they are now, when I was 19. I plan to be a gamer until the day I die, and I look forward to what the future holds for the industry.Never feel that your hobby is a waste of time OP.:cool:
  • maxvitormaxvitor Member Posts: 2,213 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I'm 54, I love video games. Ok sure, if you have something else that you are supposed to be doing and you're playing video games instead, then yes, you're wasting time. But if it comes to a choice of playing a video game or sitting in front of the television getting drunk while yelling at a football player, I'll choose the former, with getting drunk while doing so as an option.
    There are many physical and psychological benefits to gaming, but as with all things, only in moderation.
    People who criticize video games have:
    A) Never tried it.
    B) Tried it and suck at it.
    C) Said so because they think it's the mature/proper/popular thing to say, in other words they're a sheeple.
    D) Other pastimes that take up their free time that may be more or less socially acceptable than gaming.
    E) No free time to play video games, have hobbies or any form of pastime, in other words a mindless labor drone that thinks the only reason to live is to do nothing but work until you die.
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  • collegepark2151collegepark2151 Member Posts: 0 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    Everyone has their personal favorite time wasters.

    When I graduated HS, my dad thought I was foolish for using some of my grad money to buy a Super NES. Even though he was really into watching WWF and was almost late to his wedding to my mom because he was watching TV... :confused:

    Pretty much every generation looks down on the one behind for being into "childish" things even though they themselves are into things their parents' generation would consider childish.
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  • desertjetsdesertjets Member Posts: 207 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    I don't think that many people, older at least, know how into video games I am at the moment. But for the last 5-10 years I have always had something around as a distraction. Whether it was my old PlayStation and hour upon hour of GT2, or my roommate in grad school (this was in 07) who bought an N64 to play GoldenEye (which I played hour upon hour on to do the storyline mission) to whatever random game I had for my PC to play at the time. And the hours spent playing Civ III that I bought off the bargin bin at Target.


    Now what people of all ages find odd is that I am also a collector of retro hardware and software. When I tell people that I have an Atari 2600 and currently have ~90 carts they look at me kinda funny.
  • capt001capt001 Member Posts: 1 Arc User
    edited April 2013
    hawkwing43 wrote: »
    An answer to older people and video games.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy1zDBW_UAw

    Ha, thanks for the advice guys.

    I hope that this will become my future:D.
  • abaddon653abaddon653 Member Posts: 1,144 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    maxvitor wrote: »
    But if it comes to a choice of playing a video game or sitting in front of the television getting drunk while yelling at a football player, I'll choose the former, with getting drunk while doing so as an option.

    I'll sit in front of my computer while listening to music, watching the football game, getting drunk and yelling at my monitor because some idiot screwed up the stf.
  • sander233sander233 Member Posts: 3,992 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    abaddon653 wrote: »
    I'll sit in front of my computer while listening to music, watching the football game, getting drunk and yelling at my monitor because some idiot screwed up the stf.

    Who says men can't multitask? :P
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  • farmallmfarmallm Member Posts: 4,630 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    My wife thinks its kinda a waste of time. And is like why you game. I tell her is fun, and I relax. Plus its not like I'm going out with "the guys" to play some game at night. Where you can rack up some serious $ each week. Like bowling, tennis, golf, etc. So its a cheap alternative, and you won't have to worry about me running around.

    I make sure when I do play it don't interfere with our lives as well. So I mainly play when she is sleeping in on weekends, or if I'm off work and she isn't, or when she is watching a TV show I don't care to watch. So it shows I'm not addicted to it. As she don't see playing on it all the time. And not doing things for family or work.
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  • abaddon653abaddon653 Member Posts: 1,144 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    sander233 wrote: »
    Who says men can't multitask? :P

    That's just an average day. There are times I will be reading a book and surfing the net in addition to what I mentioned.
  • lonnehartlonnehart Member Posts: 846 Arc User
    edited May 2013
    I personally see video games as a way to escape the frustrations of life. And also a way to escape that giant huge blue field that tries to kill me when I go outside... either by using a giant ball of fire to cook me, or drowning me with dark puffy things floating up there...

    People around me... well... when we were all younger they all love games as much as I do. I guess getting married and raising a family changes that. My luck with women is pretty bad so that didn't happen for me.
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