Hey Gamers...Are you 35, overweight, and depressed?

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Maximilian

Lifer
Feb 8, 2004
12,603
9
81
Originally posted by: ibex333
Originally posted by: smackguy

Did you all see this article on Yahoo today? Talk about BS.....

Please do not comment on things you know nothing about. It's very ignorant of you. These people did not express the problem in the right terms, but the main idea is very true.
Many gamers indeed become overweight, or their health suffers in some other way, especially their mental health. for many people it becomes easier to stay home and play a game than go out there and get a job or meet a girl. And the longer this continues, the less strength and willpower an addict has to get up and go out there to change something in his life. Games "enable" certain people, and certain lifestyles, they "provide the means"...
Just because you, someone else here, or someone you know doesn't have this problem, doesn't mean the problem is not there!

I know plenty of people that have been negatively affected by games, and one of these people is myself. Games made me introverted and antisocial. Games made me have horrible headaches and panic attacks. I have been suffering for 11 years, and noting and no one could help me. I probably would have died eventually if not for someone that was able to help me. By following their advice on daily basis, I was able to return to "normal" life, but I will always be scarred by many ailments games caused within me, and I will never be truly "normal"again. I do agree, that there are certain types of people who are more "predisposed" to being affected by addictions than others. It doesn't necessarily have to be games, it could have been drugs, alcohol or anything else. However, games are in fact VERY addictive for certain individuals, and they can be very destructive under right conditions.

There are a bunch of folks that say that it is me that's the problem, not games. but if that is the case, then drugs are not the problem - people are. And off course we all know it's not so.

A lot of people get fired up when games are compared to drugs. While the comparison might sound ridiculous at 1st, the addiction level can be very much the same under right conditions. Gaming addiction is a very serious problem, and sadly it is largely being ignored. Games themselves, will not cause depression, or at least by far not in everyone. (I was never depressed)

However, the lifestyle that gaming addicted person might fall into, can very much lead to panic attacks, weight gain, antisocial disorder, panic attacks and depression. and yes, games are to blame for such events. There ought to be rehab centers for gaming addicts just like there are such places for drug addicts and alcoholics.

I still play games even now. I love them. But I do it much less than I used to. No it's not because I was able to truly conquer my addiction. It's simply because I don't have time to play games even if I wanted to. After a while of not playing games, I feel like the craving substantially decreases, and I honesty don't even want to play. Many of the things I used to enjoy, like RPGs, dragons, elves, dwarfs seem like a silly and a pointless waste of time now. I "might" finally be growing out of it, and in my case, it's a good thing. There are few games that attract me now. A few exceptions would be Fallout 3 and EVE Online.

Say hello to mr 35 overweight and depressed --^
 

chalmers

Platinum Member
Mar 14, 2008
2,565
0
76
I bet the percentage of people who play MMO's being overweight/introverted/antisocial is higher than any other general game category.
 

JoshGuru7

Golden Member
Aug 18, 2001
1,020
0
0
The reason I find these sort of studies is that at the root it's all just thermodynamics. For every minute that you sit inert watching TV, a movie, playing video games or reading you aren't burning as much energy as if you were doing something more active. Therefore if you keep everything else equal the TV watchers and gamers will be less healthy than the rock climbers and when you do a controlled study you will get that sort of obvious result.

The key component is moderation and balance, and a study like this will identify the overweight and depressed individuals who have difficulty with that and assign the blame to video gaming. Does it really matter how the downtime is spent, however? Do the same study but normalize for how many times people exercise each week, and you'll probably see the depressed group being the ones who DON'T play video games.
 

masterxfob

Diamond Member
May 20, 2001
7,366
3
81
i don't fall into any of those categories, but i'm not really a gamer either. i might play 5 hours a week at the most...
 

Cali21

Junior Member
Aug 11, 2009
11
0
0
32 years old, 200lbs, In the Air Force, Going to college, married with 4 kids...and yes I'm a gamer
 

pwnagesarus

Senior member
Apr 9, 2007
421
0
0
I live around the Seattle area, but I'm not 35, nor overweight. Not much of a gamer either anymore I guess.
 

ibex333

Diamond Member
Mar 26, 2005
4,092
123
106
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: ibex333
Originally posted by: smackguy

Did you all see this article on Yahoo today? Talk about BS.....

Please do not comment on things you know nothing about. It's very ignorant of you. These people did not express the problem in the right terms, but the main idea is very true.
Many gamers indeed become overweight, or their health suffers in some other way, especially their mental health. for many people it becomes easier to stay home and play a game than go out there and get a job or meet a girl. And the longer this continues, the less strength and willpower an addict has to get up and go out there to change something in his life. Games "enable" certain people, and certain lifestyles, they "provide the means"...
Just because you, someone else here, or someone you know doesn't have this problem, doesn't mean the problem is not there!

/Snip.

Please take your own advice

I do don't worry. And you should take it as well... clearly.

Here, check this out: http://www.gamespot.com/news/6...atestheadlines;title;1
 

apoppin

Lifer
Mar 9, 2000
34,890
1
0
alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: ibex333
Originally posted by: apoppin
Originally posted by: ibex333
Originally posted by: smackguy

Did you all see this article on Yahoo today? Talk about BS.....

Please do not comment on things you know nothing about. It's very ignorant of you. These people did not express the problem in the right terms, but the main idea is very true.
Many gamers indeed become overweight, or their health suffers in some other way, especially their mental health. for many people it becomes easier to stay home and play a game than go out there and get a job or meet a girl. And the longer this continues, the less strength and willpower an addict has to get up and go out there to change something in his life. Games "enable" certain people, and certain lifestyles, they "provide the means"...
Just because you, someone else here, or someone you know doesn't have this problem, doesn't mean the problem is not there!

/Snip.

Please take your own advice

I do don't worry. And you should take it as well... clearly.

Here, check this out: http://www.gamespot.com/news/6...atestheadlines;title;1

I was talking about you commenting on things you don't know about.

Your link is silly; they have "cures" for homosexuality also

Modern psychiatry has not yet progressed that much from the witchdoctor days


The study is too limited and vague to be of any use
 

skace

Lifer
Jan 23, 2001
14,488
7
81
Originally posted by: BladeVenom
The average American is 35, overweight, and depressed. So this just means the average person is now also a gamer. So it really should say, "The average person is 35, overweight, depressed, and plays video games.

That's all I came in to say Now I'll go back to reading the rest of the thread....
 

AstroManLuca

Lifer
Jun 24, 2004
15,628
5
81
I'm 25, overweight, happy, and I play video games. I know a dude who takes games way too seriously though. He's a sad, sad person. Apparently he visited another friend of mine last week and was playing some of the Halo 3 campaign on Heroic and was constantly bitching about how hard it was and how the computer must cheat... of course, it never occurred to him that he could just turn the difficulty down a notch.
 

RyanPaulShaffer

Diamond Member
Jul 13, 2005
3,434
1
0
Oh noes! I am not 35, not overweight, not depressed, and I play video games! Whatever will happen to me!?

:roll:
 

Rhoxed

Golden Member
Jun 23, 2007
1,051
3
81
i was overweight and depressed about 4years ago (6'3 260)

now im 22yo 6'3 185lbs and very happy
 

JoshGuru7

Golden Member
Aug 18, 2001
1,020
0
0
Originally posted by: AstroManLuca
I'm 25, overweight, happy, and I play video games. I know a dude who takes games way too seriously though. He's a sad, sad person. Apparently he visited another friend of mine last week and was playing some of the Halo 3 campaign on Heroic and was constantly bitching about how hard it was and how the computer must cheat... of course, it never occurred to him that he could just turn the difficulty down a notch.
I bet a lot of us have similar experiences to that - I had a roommate in college who loved to play Unreal but was convinced that the computer cheated and would get very upset when he died "when he shouldn't have".

I think part of sportsmanship in gaming is learning how to enjoy yourself whatever the outcome of the game - and being a good sport leads to a better experience with even single player gaming.
 

biostud

Lifer
Feb 27, 2003
18,406
4,967
136
Originally posted by: RyanPaulShaffer
Oh noes! I am not 35, not overweight, not depressed, and I play video games! Whatever will happen to me!?

:roll:

you'll eventually turn 35, be depressed and still play videogames.
 

flexy

Diamond Member
Sep 28, 2001
8,464
155
106
Please give me a "study" about the average TV WATCHER who spends his time watching Soaps instead.

Maybe the avg. Gamer is 35 and "overweight"...(i am not - but then maybe the average person who does nothing else than watching Garbage on TV weighs twice as much and lives a twice as unhealthy life-style?

With the difference that some games do *indeed* offer more means for communication, interaction and creativity - far from what each TV show etc. would ever be able to offer.

I just don't like such statistics
 

rchiu

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2002
3,846
0
0
Talk about a bs study. First, what's a "gamer"? someone spending 1hr a week on game count? There are all types of gamer out there. Social gamers, competitve gamers, casual gamers, addicted gamers, you gonna call them all "35, overweight and depressed".

What a waste of money done by people who have absolutely no idea what gaming is about.
 

gtd2000

Platinum Member
Oct 22, 1999
2,731
0
76
I'm over 35, probably carrying 10~15lbs too much (6ft and 205lbs) and depressed that games just arn't as much fun as the used to be - that's getting older for ya!
 
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