I really have no proof of this, just throwing it out there, but...
There seems to be a general trend in "Generation Y" to be agnostic/atheist. I don't think it has as much to do with gamers as it's just a social phenomenon. With the sometimes paralyzing amount of information that is available to anyone in the world these days, I think those of us born in the last twenty or so years have caught on to the fairy-tale-like element that religions come across as superficially and that dogma and religious writings are safety blankets to help deal with the fact that we'll rot in the ground some day.
The only link to gaming I can tell personally is that there are a fair number of video games that use themes and references to religious and mythological minutia, but treat them for the fantasy elements that they really do come across as. In that sense, it sort of detaches the religious sense from them and instead makes them the modern-day wizards, hobbits, and sorcery. Still, I really do think this practice to be part of the social phenomenon I mentioned previously; taking the wonder out of religion through MAKING it wondrous.
That said, I'm a fairly dedicated agnostic myself (if my username didn't betray that fact already), so at least if I haven't inspired someone to go out and research this, one can at least count me in among the statistics. I lost my faith due mainly to personal reasons and epiphanies, not because, say, Xenogears convinced me that God might as well be just a giant world-destroying biological weapon (woops, that's a slight spoiler...).
There seems to be a general trend in "Generation Y" to be agnostic/atheist. I don't think it has as much to do with gamers as it's just a social phenomenon. With the sometimes paralyzing amount of information that is available to anyone in the world these days, I think those of us born in the last twenty or so years have caught on to the fairy-tale-like element that religions come across as superficially and that dogma and religious writings are safety blankets to help deal with the fact that we'll rot in the ground some day.
The only link to gaming I can tell personally is that there are a fair number of video games that use themes and references to religious and mythological minutia, but treat them for the fantasy elements that they really do come across as. In that sense, it sort of detaches the religious sense from them and instead makes them the modern-day wizards, hobbits, and sorcery. Still, I really do think this practice to be part of the social phenomenon I mentioned previously; taking the wonder out of religion through MAKING it wondrous.
That said, I'm a fairly dedicated agnostic myself (if my username didn't betray that fact already), so at least if I haven't inspired someone to go out and research this, one can at least count me in among the statistics. I lost my faith due mainly to personal reasons and epiphanies, not because, say, Xenogears convinced me that God might as well be just a giant world-destroying biological weapon (woops, that's a slight spoiler...).