/getoffmylawnEClaris said:So can this thread be basically summed up as "Those damn kids"?
Because I feel like old people have been saying that since forever
Shouldn't that be the other way around? You respect something because it's a threat.bigfatcarp93 said:Yeah, maybe I could have made my logic a little clearer there... my thought is that you have to respect something to fear it.imahobbit4062 said:Maybe I'm just a moron, but they don't find anything scary because they don't have respect? What?
Isn't the rating system more or less a warning for the parent to understand what the kid is playing and not a technical rule to abide by. I've seen mothers take their eight year olds to watch slasher flicks, did those kids get annoying in the theater, why yes, but that doesn't mean that watching that movie would have made them phycho killers.overpuce said:I think that the general lack of respect and self entitlement stems from shit parents. It's not the kids fault that they were raised with a TV for a parents. Not the kid's fault that they come to expect getting everything that they want when that's what their parents do.
I've seen it when working in retail. 12 year old kid wants GTA. I warn the parents that the game is rated M and may not be suitable for his/her child. Parent takes time to read the back of the game. Parent says no. Kid pitches fit. Parent says yes.
No, not really...I mean yeah, the game wouldn't hurt the kid, but my goal wasn't "DEFEND HIS INNOCENCE." it was to bring discipline and my goal was accomplished. I only hope it's still sticking. It was funny though, a little 10 year old swinging at someone roughly twice his size, only to be picked up and put in his place. The mother clearly was having enough of his whining too.Matthew94 said:I think you should have kept to yourself. As others have said here, games like COD have overly high ratings and other than gruesome horror, barely any have content that could "damage" a child. Actually, playing horror games can help a child. Because games like Doom 3 and RE4 were meant to be scary I was afraid to play them and my parents didn't want me to own them, when I actually played them I was only scared for about 5 minutes which is the amount of time it takes to realise that you have guns and merely have to blow away your enemies which removes all tension.DrgoFx said:snip
Gamers grew up with DOOM and Quake and had no issue playing those but when it came to be their time to have kids they took on this stupid double standard. They need to wise up.
Same with their health. We end up overprotecting them. Throwing medication at them so their immune systems don't. Creating the the most cold boring playgrounds ever. There is no risk/reward anymore. We sanitize life for them and then they are going to be unable to cope with anything as adults.manic_depressive13 said:I'd throw a hissy fit over that. Not because my parents said no, but because they said no as a result of seeing the rating. Ratings are hugely exaggerated. I was watching/playing M and MA movies/games when I was eleven years old. I wasn't any more succeptible to them then than I am now. I think the problem with kids today is that we coddle them and treat them like stupid retards who can't cope with anything or think for themselves. Then we act confused when they start acting up or rebelling. Or worse, when they actually wind up as mindless dumbasses.overpuce said:I've seen it when working in retail. 12 year old kid wants GTA. I warn the parents that the game is rated M and may not be suitable for his/her child. Parent takes time to read the back of the game. Parent says no. Kid pitches fit. Parent says yes.