LaurenShaw
LaurenShaw
LaurenShaw

I'll give you the point that video game addiction might not cause the shock, but I seem to remember articles from this site talking about people dying while gaming for days at a time. It might be rare but it happens.

I tried but it's snowing. I then tried to catch a snowflake on my tongue but it tasted like chemicals, so I brushed off the walk and went inside. ;)

I know the device was a joke, Ai mean it looks ridiculous and people would smell so bad they'd pass out anyway. ewwww. I suppose it was the fact that there an inference to gaming being a disability that set me off. Maybe I need to drink a second cup of coffee before reading Kotaku in the morning? Probably. But those I

All true. Maybe my attempt to express my point is skewed as in the safety world, we look at the results of addictions on personal health and safety and he it impacts everyone, and differentiation only comes from how the addictions are treated, but that they exist and the reasons to have people offered treatment all

My clarification was to state that they are all addictions and all should be perceived as serious things, though some have more serious physical consequences than others. But all lead to issues. Addiction is a broad category, and some were trying to state that it wasn't quite like that. The definition stands, but I do

I have since apologised for not clarifying that I did not mean severity, just the nature of it being an addiction. Introducing foreign chemicals is certainly far more dangerous. But yet I have seen gamers I've known have the same angry and grumpy reactions when they couldn't make a set raid time or had not played a

Most of us do! But not everyone does. Was I approaching the level of WoW addict at one point. I would say yes. I think this might become a serious concern in the future of we don't try and understand it now.

It seems I started some controversy, so here goes. I asked the safety specialists in the OH&S group, of which I am a part, and per definition, addiction is a brain dependency on external sources, which can be, but is not limited to, ingestion or inhalation of chemicals. Traditionally, gaming refers to gambling, but

And there we go. Our world is a strange place, and the media has gone from everyone must be informed to everyone must only be informed by us and no other agency so how do we sell papers. Not sure how I feel about Leveson entirely yet but we'll see...

Yep. It is not the same as far as severity, I will admit that I should have clarified that, BUT as I have replied to others, any external stimulus that creates an endorphin rich condition in the brain can lead to reliance on that particular stimulus, and thus is an addiction. Can we agree that people can be addicted

At the core, video game addiction is the brain becoming used to an external stimulus and not wanting to be without it. Do apologise for incorrectly implying that the severity might be the same, which we know it is not, but the basic function of the brain enjoying the endorphins and chemicals activated by the rewards

Ah, thank you for clarifying how I should have stated it and thus avoided the slew of detractors. Those kids who vanish all weekend to play CoD and attain top spots on leader boards are prime examples. It's not the same as the chemical dependencies but hey, when you have something you can "win" there can be an

I don't know, I've seen articles here about people dying in gaming and Internet cafes. We have the stereotype of the gamer who is forever in the dark basement, atrophied and unhealthy, unwilling to give up the top spot on the game. Addiction is about the Brian's reliance on stimuli from external sources. Yes, the

People with any reliance on external stimuli, chemical or other, should seek help in some form to get better. My suggestion about balance is to say that a gaming addict could learn to find a play versus life balance. Other addictions are more serious, such as alcoholism, and I have seen that in people I know, and I

Finally, some sense. People think addictions have to be chemical based. The brain is a complex machine that enjoys certain means of stimuli, and when we get to deep into them, the brain continues to crave them.

People think addictions have to be chemical based. The brain is a complex machine that enjoys certain means of stimuli, and when we get to deep into them, the brain continues to crave them. It's not just the things we consume through ingestion or inhalation or add to our blood streams, but the very chemicals our brain

I would not deny the seriousness of chemical addictions, but any stimuli the brain depends on and becomes too accustomed to is an addiction. The chemicals are not just what we put in, but what are bodies produce in response.

There's no need to be so rude with your reply. Perhaps you are part of the problem of a society that would even dare to joke about this.

Video game addiction is the same as drug addiction or alcoholism. Do the Japanese list those as disabilities? Gaming addicts need help to find a balance, at the very least.

Journalists always slip out of the responsibility bit. Look at the issues in the UK right now. Trying to put in some oversight is really stirring up a lot. Tabloid should only refer to the printing format of the newspaper or magazine, but instead it means "scandal rag mag reporting on the private things of