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BBC Investigates Game Addiction

by - source: CVG

A BBC investigation into game addiction has sparked a retaliation by Blizzard and the UK's TIGA.

Tonight BBC's "investigative" Panorama TV show is scheduled to reveal the hidden psychological devices in games "that are designed to keep us coming back for more." Annoyed already? Join the club. The "Panorama: Addicted to Games?" episode has already sparked controversy and it hasn't even aired, provoking retaliations by Blizzard Entertainment and the trade association representing the UK's games industry, TIGA.

"What we can say is that there is absolutely no proven link between video games and addiction," said Dr. Richard Wilson, TIGA CEO, in a statement. "The World Health Organization has no official medical diagnosis of video games addiction. Playing games is a hobby and people can certainly become passionate about them. This is no different from a passion for a particular book, TV program or sport."

He goes on to talk about how the Nintendo Wii and Microsoft's Kinect can improve fitness, and that a fifth of UK's developers create educational titles. "There is a world of difference between people who claim, in the colloquial non medical sense, that they are addicted to games, music, football or a TV program and people who are clinically addicted, in scientific parlance, to drugs or alcohol. People may claim to be addicted to something like games or football, but in most cases they are not," he added.

Blizzard also issued a statement ahead of tonight's airing, saying that its games are designed to be fun, however like all forms of entertainment, day-to-day life should always take precedence. "World of Warcraft contains practical tools that assist players and parents in monitoring playing time," the company said.

So what's ruffled everyone's feathers? The reporter behind the investigation, Raphael Rowe, told CVG that he spoke to numerous young gamers about their "addiction." One Call of Duty player revealed that he engages in 12-hour sessions or overnighters; another gamer admits to skipping school for weeks at a time just to play Blizzard's MMORPG, world of Warcraft.

But in addition to the gamer testimonies, Rowe also said that a developer showed him "some of the invisible psychological devices in video games which keep players wanting more."

Panorama: Addicted to Games? is on BBC One and BBC One HD tonight at 8:30pm. So far it's not appearing on BBC America's schedule, so we may need to wait for the rerun to discover what new villains in the gaming industry are eating our brain cells and draining our souls.

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Achilles295 07/12/2010 03:28
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I have also pulled off some overnight CoD sessions with my friends, and I've skipped work/school (I go to a night school and work in the morning) for raid events. Am I to be incarcerated at a rehabilitation center?

That's BS. If I want to skip school to game, I'll do it because my classmates are retards and my teachers are self-important, ignorant fucks and not because I'm addicted.

These people obviously have it WAY easy in life if they can afford to dedicate that much time to gaming.

will_chellam 07/12/2010 07:02
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I pulled an all-nighter on powerpoint last week in order to put a presentation together on orthopaedic injuries...

So that must mean I'm addicted to work...

How about people who go out to clubs or bars all-night? are they addicted? of-course not - it just means they arrange their hobbies outside of the confines of their working lives...

Griffolion 07/12/2010 10:45
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During my Psychology degree, i spent some time looking at the evidence that computer games has a unique link to addiction. I also looked at computer games and their link to violence in young people. The evidence strongly suggested absolutely no link between the both. Individuals who get addicted to video games such as WoW were shown to already be pre-disposed to becoming addicted to things in the first place; the fact that it was a video-game is irrelevant. Kids who commit crimes based on those found in video games such as GTA were found to be pre-disposed to violent behaviour in the first place and were just as likely to commit a copy-cat crime based off a film, tv show or book.

In short, video games are here to stay, it boasts an economy that rivals the film industry, just because a bunch of closed minded luddites in positions of power don't like them doesn't mean the billions of individuals world wide should be restricted from enjoying video games. Because we all know, there are lobbyists out there who would want nothing more than to see this industry die, or at least remain leashed as a 'childrens toy'.

Skid 07/12/2010 14:02
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Apologise if this is a breach of rules but the following video is relevant to the article.
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/vi [...] kinner-Box

Also have a look at the one entitled Gamer.

Motopsychojdn 07/12/2010 21:29
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i would watch it but I have a guild Raid in icc at nine :P
Moto

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