This topic is locked from further discussion.
I'll tell you something; I don't play games because I can do in them what I can do in real life. If I could, I wouldn't play games. None of the games I've played so far are possible in real life. At least for me they aren't.
He should be happy. Because if I can't put all this energy of stuff I want to do in games, then I'm doing them in real life. I'm a very nice person, or so I've been told. I really think without games I wouldn't be so nice. Sad, sure, but true.
Some movies are more violent than games:Pshinian
have you see the new Rambo trailer? blood and guts everywhere.
I dont think they are and i think other forms of entertainment are just as if not more violent than gaming some will say but you control the characted doing the violence in games but pressing a button is very different to shooting someone or running someone over.
With all this talk from Jack Thompson about GTA and now Halo it got me thinking, are games going in the wrong direction. In this day and age of better graphics violence and gore in games seems more real and so harder to forget when you switch off the game, but should technology dictate violence in games.CrazyAssJack
I think your a very unintelligent person for starting a topic based on speculation and opinion. Then relaying this false propaganda as fact.
With all this talk from Jack Thompson about GTA and now Halo it got me thinking, are games going in the wrong direction. In this day and age of better graphics violence and gore in games seems more real and so harder to forget when you switch off the game, but should technology dictate violence in games.CrazyAssJack
Hmm. Doesn't seem like most of the responses here are to what you everything actually stated but instead based on preselected biases.
But, to answer your point directly, as games become more graphically realistic, violence too has become a lot more visceral and detailed. And, as someone that's nearing the end of his 4th decade of gaming (started in the laaaate 70's), the more realistic game violence has become, the more it has turned me off. Realistic violence is ugly and horrifying, and the closer gaming gets to that ... well, it has the same effect for me.
With that, I'm not ready to make a connection between real world violence and game violence. I think that discussion is very complicated and nobody wants to deal with complicated issues as they should in this day and age. But I do wish that more and more games would offer alternatives to using violence as a solution to dealing with problems. That's something that I've loved about Splinter Cell games. They have dealt with violence and the consequences of it better than any other games that I've played. AND they offer solutions other than violence to reach nearly all of the objectives in the games.
With that, maybe instead of asking if games are too violent, the question should be are there too many violent games?
I'll tell you something; I don't play games because I can do in them what I can do in real life. If I could, I wouldn't play games. None of the games I've played so far are possible in real life. At least for me they aren't.
He should be happy. Because if I can't put all this energy of stuff I want to do in games, then I'm doing them in real life. I'm a very nice person, or so I've been told. I really think without games I wouldn't be so nice. Sad, sure, but true.
FearlessSpirit
I agree, if there were only games based on driving around..going to work....doing schoolwork etc...Who the hell would buy that?
i say the more violent the better. i see videogames as a stess relever if i kill someone in a videogame i dont have to in real life...did that make me sound dementedsonofabear17
yeah, but who cares! i like demented people and i like really violent videogames.
[QUOTE="Trickshot771"]Games are NEVER too violent as long as the player is mature enough to play it.Platearmor_6
Spot on.
Exactly. As a relatively mature 15 year old, I think I'm mature enough to play an M rated game such as Gears of War or Halo 2, and I do play them. Should I be hearing the dreadfully squeaky voices of 10 years olds playing with me? Absolutely not, and especially not on Gears of War lol.
I recently puchased Saint's Row. And most of you should know there is lots of vulgar language and violence in the game. I also have a little sister, she was really into it (not actually playing herself, but watching me), and after my parents saw what it was about, they no longer let her watch me play it. Although some may think it's good, I am on the fence as I also noticed her tendancy to try to watch me play it without me saying anything to her, so I'm thinking do you introduce games like this so the child won't care about it as much. Or should we keep them away making them want to watch and see what's going on, because if a child is watching something they want, they'll pay more attention to it.
Just my thoughts... but as for myself... I say COME ON WITH THE VIOLENCE!
I recently puchased Saint's Row. And most of you should know there is lots of vulgar language and violence in the game. I also have a little sister, she was really into it (not actually playing herself, but watching me), and after my parents saw what it was about, they no longer let her watch me play it. Although some may think it's good, I am on the fence as I also noticed her tendancy to try to watch me play it without me saying anything to her, so I'm thinking do you introduce games like this so the child won't care about it as much. Or should we keep them away making them want to watch and see what's going on, because if a child is watching something they want, they'll pay more attention to it.
Just my thoughts... but as for myself... I say COME ON WITH THE VIOLENCE!
processedkill
you might as well say lets let everyone try crack, that way they dont want it?
[QUOTE="processedkill"]I recently puchased Saint's Row. And most of you should know there is lots of vulgar language and violence in the game. I also have a little sister, she was really into it (not actually playing herself, but watching me), and after my parents saw what it was about, they no longer let her watch me play it. Although some may think it's good, I am on the fence as I also noticed her tendancy to try to watch me play it without me saying anything to her, so I'm thinking do you introduce games like this so the child won't care about it as much. Or should we keep them away making them want to watch and see what's going on, because if a child is watching something they want, they'll pay more attention to it.
Just my thoughts... but as for myself... I say COME ON WITH THE VIOLENCE!
hansmacher
you might as well say lets let everyone try crack, that way they dont want it?
Does everyone really want crack? As there are no benefits...
With all this talk from Jack Thompson about GTA and now Halo it got me thinking, are games going in the wrong direction. In this day and age of better graphics violence and gore in games seems more real and so harder to forget when you switch off the game, but should technology dictate violence in games.CrazyAssJack
yea they are if ur a homo
No, parents are becoming more ignorant. A lot of parents let their underaged, already violent kids play violent games. I played violent games for a long time and I can say with 100% confidence that I did not have a history of violence before, during, or after I played a certain game due to my parents teaching me wrong from right. To me, it all depends on the parents who let their kids play the games and don't teach them fiction from reality.GungraveZero
That and a good ol' ass kickin (sorry mods had to be said) by mom and pop to give me a reality check to make sure I knew I was still in the "real" world ;) ...
[QUOTE="hansmacher"][QUOTE="processedkill"]I recently puchased Saint's Row. And most of you should know there is lots of vulgar language and violence in the game. I also have a little sister, she was really into it (not actually playing herself, but watching me), and after my parents saw what it was about, they no longer let her watch me play it. Although some may think it's good, I am on the fence as I also noticed her tendancy to try to watch me play it without me saying anything to her, so I'm thinking do you introduce games like this so the child won't care about it as much. Or should we keep them away making them want to watch and see what's going on, because if a child is watching something they want, they'll pay more attention to it.
Just my thoughts... but as for myself... I say COME ON WITH THE VIOLENCE!
processedkill
you might as well say lets let everyone try crack, that way they dont want it?
Does everyone really want crack? As there are no benefits...
ok crack might be a little extreme, but lets X instead.
[QUOTE="GungraveZero"]No, parents are becoming more ignorant. A lot of parents let their underaged, already violent kids play violent games. I played violent games for a long time and I can say with 100% confidence that I did not have a history of violence before, during, or after I played a certain game due to my parents teaching me wrong from right. To me, it all depends on the parents who let their kids play the games and don't teach them fiction from reality.DeltoidRecon
That and a good ol' ass kickin (sorry mods had to be said) by mom and pop to give me a reality check to make sure I knew I was still in the "real" world ;) ...
AMEN
Please Log In to post.
Log in to comment