Take Your Kids to a New Level
by Chris Remo, Apr 21, 2006 1:30pm PDTGameStudy.org, a site dedicated to examining Korean gaming culture, has a look at a recent phenomenon: parents leveling up for their kids in role-playing games, particularly online games. Working from a Korean-language news article, GameStudy.org describes the bizarre progression that has resulted in some parents taking over grinding duties for their progeny. In the past, arcade games and console games were seen as a waste of time by parents, but they were not so time consuming as to be widely detrimental. However, online games, especially those with a social slant, are "universal communicative tools among kids." They have become ubiquitous among Korean youth, and can get to the point where they significantly interfere with eduction. The somewhat surprising result is that many parents, in an attempt to keep their children from ditching school to go play games at an internet cafe or somewhere else where the parents can't keep tabs on them, offer to take over grinding duties for their children's characters, ensuring that their characters can stay compeitive without cutting into school time. Of course, this can lead to the parents becoming deeply engrossed in online games as well.
Thanks to this sacrifice, their daughters and sons can enjoy respectable status in the virtual world without sacrificing their schooling advancement. You should remember that parents' concern for education in Korea is really excessive. Children are generally busy in attending after-school private academy. It is almost impossible for them to devote 3 or 4 hours a day to play games. Any side effect? There is no exception in irresistible charms of online games. In doing power-leveling, sometimes, parents themselves unconsciously slided into games too deep. Above news article reported that a mother who did a game for her kid had a big trouble with her husband for full engrossment in game.That's a pretty vicious cycle there.
Closure takes $100K Grand Prize at IGC 2012
Lego renews Star Wars license for ten more years
Review: Beat Hazard Ultra (iOS)
Tim Schafer expected $2000 on first day of Kickstarter funding
Trend Micro offers internet security for Vita
Comments
Lemme get this straight....
After 40+ hours of dealing with the madhouse that is the Workplace(NOT including any commutes to and from said madhouse),and after forking over room and board,food and clothing,luxuries like a computer and games ta boot...the lil hellspawn wants ME...ME to make sure his uber-ninja-elf stays just as uber as the rest of his/her loser friends' characters?
And the request is a serious one...
And people are surprised that there's a negative population growth...
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 9 replies.
They see that we play it so much they just begged and begged to let them play it. One daughter has a level 6 mage and the other has a level 5 warrior. We aren't sure if this is ok or not. We don't let them play very often (maybe once or twice a week for an hour or so) so it's not cutting into school or playing outside or that kind of stuff. And they know it's pretend. The violience isn't really even that blatant - it's not like they are playing Postal or something. Anyways, their hand/eye coordination has improved by leaps and bounds since they started this. You forget just how incredibly difficult using a mouse and keyboard at the same time can be for a small kid. Plus they group together and learn how to work as a team which is awesome to watch.
so they can focus on homework. Yeah. That's it.
Also, this article is interesting, but it's also one of those grandma found dead in trailer with 23 cats stories: nobody cares.
Whole country is caught up always chasing Japan due to the whole occupation during the war. Most older Korean's I know live a shallow, hollow life due to this thinking. While at the same times forcing their children into the same mold that brought them their misery.
Appearance is better that substance with these people.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 4 replies.
it's better to don't play them at all, just wasting time imo (yes I used to play myself and it was fun)
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 6 replies.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 3 replies.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 2 replies.
I know this is a gaming site but my god, reading that makes me think games are starting to really erode at the fabric of Korean society... its like the ultimate drug! These RPGs lure children away from real life instead of helping them build their own.
If this younger generation does nothing but drop out of school to sit on their ass and play games all day, what will happen to the country? The fact the parents even tolerate this shit and condone this as socially acceptable behaviour (by playing for their kids) is what's even more mind blowing, but I guess it's a cultural thing too.
Online RPGs are the crack of the digital millennium.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 3 replies.
But chances are the parents needed there character to "duo" with the main as well.... Slackers!!!!