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Re: Gaming addiction
Posted: Mon Jun 23, 2014 7:23 am
by FlawedIntellect
Starhunter wrote:I don't know the game, but it sounds like you have to fly like crazy to make it?
Why are we far less inclined to take risks, put energy, planning, speed and skill into real life?
Is life so unpredictable and unrewarding that, if you want the feeling of success - play a game?
We deserve to succeed don't we?
Well, for one, many people live lives with mundane jobs, and don't get a lot of vacation time. A number of jobs require highly specialized skills for a specific purpose.
Video games can take people to places that are different from their norm. Sometimes these games center around a different job. Sometimes these games have very surreal settings, which embrace their silliness to engage the player. Even so, there are things that are done in games that are dangerous or even impossible to do in real life. Can you drive racecars professionally at incredible speeds, if not any other car? [Need for Speed, gran Turrismo, Forza, etc...] Can you run in a suit of armor and fight against giant dinosaur-like creatures, and use items collected from them to create better armor and weapons? [Monster Hunter], can you take on a muscular person nearly the size of a two-story building and knock him out with a series of well-timed flashy moves in a sequence? [Street Fighter, Marvel VS Capcom, Tatsunoko VS Capcom, Guilty Gear, etc...]
Can you single-handedly fight off an entire alien invasion in your flying ship? (Alien Invaders, Galaga, Galaxian, DoDonPachi, etc...) How about single-handedly snatching the plans to the Death Star to give the Rebel Alliance a fighting chance? [Star Wars Dark Forces].
Re: Gaming addiction
Posted: Tue Jun 24, 2014 1:02 am
by Starhunter
So can we generalize, and say that games are a place to overcome - whatever...?
So many different reasons people play.
I believe people have a deep need to be empowered, to be able to overcome whatever is hindering their experience of life.
What if that deep need is stronger than humans would like to admit and that the Spirit of God is driving that dissatisfaction?
So to have an addiction, may be a good sign, and not necessarily a bad one?
Could it be that this inner desire to overcome is being utilized by the enemy of God to distract them?
Is there a prize and victory that can be obtained in the real game of life, which has been withheld from us by our own blindness?
Re: Gaming addiction
Posted: Tue Jun 24, 2014 7:49 pm
by FlawedIntellect
Okay, look. Video games are a form of temporary escapism, much like movies or books, except that it is interactive by nature. It's more like taking a brief vacation in a fantasy world.
It's one way people can cope with the stress life can bring, and also a way to cope with boredom.
Can it be utilized by the evil one as a distraction from the importance of spiritual growth in a walk with God? Sure, though the real question is what can't be used as a form of hindrance in that regard?
Video games aren't necessarily inherently evil. It depends on the purpose for the game's existence by the developers' intentions, and on the purpose for which a player uses the game.
Re: Gaming addiction
Posted: Tue Jun 24, 2014 9:59 pm
by neo-x
any type of addiction is damaging, including addiction to prayer. By addiction I mean when people leave everything out and just become so focused on a thing that it damages them and people around them.
Re: Gaming addiction
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2014 7:51 pm
by Alpha~Omega
Dark Souls.
The Bible says to honor the Lord in all we do. I use the time I spend playing Bideo Games to further Gods kingdom.
For instance, I play a couple games where you have a screen name and interact with other people. A common name I use for such games is "Turn2Christ".
Oddly enough, my name can be seen in several videos on youtube. God works in mysterious ways.