Would we all be better people without gaming?

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Marzirocks

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Mar 14, 2011
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http://www.cracked.com/article_19431_5-mind-blowing-things-crowds-do-better-than-experts.html

This was only written 3 days ago, so funny you should bring it up.
 

ZenoX969

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Apr 1, 2011
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aescuder said:
Every now and again I start entertaining these thoughts. And then go back to gaming as per usual.


Seriously though, what would we all be doing without video games? If you think about the collective participation hours spent on them we (collectively) probably would have found a cure for cancer or be all a virtuoso at some instrument.



EDIT: Admittedly cancer is a bit of an exaggeration.lol But you just never know. Video games are just a channel for productivity. Some gamers can be brilliant people but the areas of interest just doesn't have a streamlined user interface games have.
Speak for yourself, I'm fairly good at playing guitar. And I've also written some songs.
 

Okysho

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Sep 12, 2010
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I wouldn't have anything else if I didn't have videogaming.

...
...
... that's not true. I'd be more of a Manga fanboy than I am now, if there was no gaming.

I plan on making a future in gaming (like many people I encounter on this site) I can't see myself going into anything else at this point.
 

Arina Love

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Apr 8, 2010
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i would be bored out of my mind without games and anime. TV sucks, new music suck, outside of house suck a big time, don't care about self discovery bullsh*t i just want to go to work spend money on games then play games + watch anime in my free time. Do i want to be better person? NO, because i don't care.
 
Jun 11, 2008
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No no we wouldn't. People aren't bothered to be that good at interests or cure cancer because it is genuinely hard playing games isn't.
 

aescuder

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ZenoX969 said:
aescuder said:
Every now and again I start entertaining these thoughts. And then go back to gaming as per usual.


Seriously though, what would we all be doing without video games? If you think about the collective participation hours spent on them we (collectively) probably would have found a cure for cancer or be all a virtuoso at some instrument.



EDIT: Admittedly cancer is a bit of an exaggeration.lol But you just never know. Video games are just a channel for productivity. Some gamers can be brilliant people but the areas of interest just doesn't have a streamlined user interface games have.
Speak for yourself, I'm fairly good at playing guitar. And I've also written some songs.

....ok...good for you i guess...



...I'm working on two master degrees right now and I'm fluent in two languages but that has absolutely nothing to do with the topic right now...
 

Bad Jim

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I reckon someday we will have extremely realistic physics and you will basically be able to carve up materials within the game world and make a working fighter plane. We'll be able to do real engineering virtually.

You could have a game where someone actually invents something really clever to get through a game, and it could help people in the real world. Then Ubisoft will fire half the dev team for not making it linear enough.
 

Hides His Eyes

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If we could manage to motivate ourselves to use the freed up time productively (and that's a big if) then yeah I think we probably would be "better people", in the self-help book sense; fitter, happier and more productive. We could throw out books, films and music while we were at it and we'd be the most effective people who ever lived.

But we'd never get to visit Middle Earth or Tamriel, or take down evil government conspiracies, or do magic or command armies or slay dragons, not to mention never opening our minds and exploring ideas in the way that only art allows. I wouldn't want that.

That's what I think anyway.
 

Fishyash

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Dec 27, 2010
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I share the sentiment of the 'if it's not games it's music/books/movies/TV' (probably movies or TV).
 

Jake0fTrades

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Jun 5, 2008
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I would have probably killed myself by now. What else would I do to relieve stress? Pick up sticks?
 

modularstar

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Mar 20, 2011
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If i didn't have games i think i'd probably be ... *shudder* normal...
I kid. I have no idea. But i suppose if nobody had videogames, we wouldn't miss it so it wouldn't matter...
 

CrimsonBlaze

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Aug 29, 2011
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Nah. If not for gaming, I would just indulge in some of my other hobbies. I probably wouldn't be as thought provoking and creative as I am now, but overall, it would change me in the slightest.
 

Jakub324

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Deadlock Radium said:
Id we didn't have gaming, all people would've been angry and pissy.
My opinion at least.
That's what I was going to say. Yahtzee hit the nail on the head: "The best way to blow off steam is to blow off somebody's nadgers."
 

Ace of Spades

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No, we'd just find something else to do. Removing someone's hobby, forcefully or otherwise doesn't force or even encourage them to be productive. We'd be spending our time in some other way, TV, books, whatever.
 

ace_of_something

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When my computer exploded (yes, literally) the weeks waiting to get new pieces to build a new one. At this time i had no console either. What did I do? I went to more frat parties and subsequently got more... well, the short of it is that i didn't do more homework or anything really constructive. Free time was still spent doing non-helpful to all of mankind things.
 

spartan231490

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Jan 14, 2010
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aescuder said:
spartan231490 said:
aescuder said:
Every now and again I start entertaining these thoughts. And then go back to gaming as per usual.


Seriously though, what would we all be doing without video games? If you think about the collective participation hours spent on them we (collectively) probably would have found a cure for cancer or be all a virtuoso at some instrument.
or we would have all read books or watched movies. which do you think is more likely?

escapism is escapism, regardless of the method.

I've read on Jane Mcgonigals research (look up Reality is Broken) that gamers are super-engaged in videogames not because they are really big on escapism but because games these days are designed to be engaging (or addicting if you want to be cynical).

So it's not because most gamers are escapist although I definitely am, but more of videogames being really good at creating blissful productivity. There is a constant feedback system and we always feel like we are accomplishing something.
That logic makes no sense. If they didn't want escapism, they would never have started playing video games to begin. A really good book is more engaging than a bad book, but you still need the motivation to pick it up and start reading. Also, I always feel like I'm accomplishing nothing when I play video games.
 

krazykidd

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Mar 22, 2008
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aescuder said:
Every now and again I start entertaining these thoughts. And then go back to gaming as per usual.


Seriously though, what would we all be doing without video games? If you think about the collective participation hours spent on them we (collectively) probably would have found a cure for cancer or be all a virtuoso at some instrument.



EDIT: Admittedly cancer is a bit of an exaggeration.lol But you just never know. Video games are just a channel for productivity. Some gamers can be brilliant people but the areas of interest just doesn't have a streamlined user interface games have.
Dude , if all the time i spent playing diablo 2 and world of warcraft was spent studying , i would be one of the most prestigous doctors in canada . ( not to mention all the time i spent other games since i'm primarily a consol gamer)
 

StormShaun

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Feb 1, 2009
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If it was me it would make me a much, much, more worse person, the morality system in games have taught me a whole heap of stuff.
 

aescuder

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Aug 24, 2010
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spartan231490 said:
aescuder said:
spartan231490 said:
aescuder said:
Every now and again I start entertaining these thoughts. And then go back to gaming as per usual.


Seriously though, what would we all be doing without video games? If you think about the collective participation hours spent on them we (collectively) probably would have found a cure for cancer or be all a virtuoso at some instrument.
or we would have all read books or watched movies. which do you think is more likely?

escapism is escapism, regardless of the method.

I've read on Jane Mcgonigals research (look up Reality is Broken) that gamers are super-engaged in videogames not because they are really big on escapism but because games these days are designed to be engaging (or addicting if you want to be cynical).

So it's not because most gamers are escapist although I definitely am, but more of videogames being really good at creating blissful productivity. There is a constant feedback system and we always feel like we are accomplishing something.
That logic makes no sense. If they didn't want escapism, they would never have started playing video games to begin. A really good book is more engaging than a bad book, but you still need the motivation to pick it up and start reading. Also, I always feel like I'm accomplishing nothing when I play video games.

Don't be so quick to dismiss the research. Look up Jane Mcgonigal and watch/read some of her stuff. God even extra credits did a segment of something like this.

Of course you need the INITIAL motivation to do it, but then we go into the science of attention which is not the same as interaction and definitely not the same as engagement. Its the capability to sustain someone's attention over extremely long periods of time that is sort of interesting -- a self-sustaining engagement economy if you will.

You really don't feel any sense of accomplishment when you play games? every time you kill someone/something? every time you craft something? every time you beat your friend? every time you beat a level? every time you level up? every time you have an epic win? every time you actually finish a game? These are all reward systems that keeps players engaged and want to keep playing more, and is something that is somewhat unique to gaming.

There is escapism quality to well built worlds, but then there is deep gameplay mechanics that keeps you playing. There is nothing generally escapist about realistic games but its the gameplay mechanics that makes them engaging. Plus, I would hate to think that I just play games because I hate the real world so much that I want to escape from it - it really the case for me.

If you really feel like you're accomplishing nothing when you play games then I think maybe you should stop (since they don't really give you any positive emotions) or I think you might be playing them wrong.