heavy liquid
Member
It's not the longest article, but he makes some interesting points, and it's nice to see someone write something positive after all the recent articles stating that video games are warping kids because "the industry seems to delight in pushing the envelope".
http://techcentralstation.com/070704C.html
http://techcentralstation.com/070704C.html
Legislators around the country are trying to ban violent videogames as immoral. According to this AP report in Wired News:
But the move against violent videogames strikes me as a bad idea for other reasons. Not only does it represent an unconstitutional infringement on free speech -- as the Wired News story notes, "None of the measures that passed have survived legal challenge" -- but it may actually make America weaker.
What's more, civilians who play military videogames, at least, may acquire useful knowledge. This may even have political ramifications. When television commentators second-guess things that happen in combat -- often showing an astounding degree of military ignorance in the process -- people who have played military videogames are more likely to see through it. At the very least, they have some sense of how fast things can happen, and how confusing they can be.
"Most people who wargame don't become real warriors -- although the games have always been especially popular at military academies. But anyone who spends a few hundred hours playing wargames (and many hobbyists put in thousands of hours) will soon know more about the nuts and bolts of warfare than most journalists who cover the subject, and most politicians who vote on military matters. . . .