Then came World of Warcraft, an online role-playing game (RPG). Clearly there is something about this particular game that seems to draw people into a dangerous addiction. There are organized "guilds," a group you join so you can fight as part of a team.The guild agrees to "meet" somewhere in the game at a designated time for an "instance" which can take any where from a half hour to four hours to finish. If you miss an instance, you might get kicked out of the guild. So your whole life begins to revolve around what the guild tells you to do. The more you play, the better you get; the better you get, the higher the level you are at. The lower level players are at the mercy of the higher level players when they are in or looking for a guild. Get kicked out of the guild you're in; and, if you're a lower level player, you may have a hard time finding a new guild to accept you. So there is pressure to play more and more to raise your level. Part of the attraction is that every thing is happening live and the game enables you to communicate with any of your friends that are on at the same time. During the day, kids are at school, adults are at work. The only time you know for sure the people you communicate with are on the game is at night. A lot of people end up staying up all night playing. Some forget to eat they are so consumed with their "game." Dr. Maressa Orzack, clinical psychologist and founder/coordinator of the Computer Addiction Service at McLean Hospital in Newton, MA, estimates that 40% of the six million World of Warcraft players are addicted to the game. She also believes that game developers, such as Blizzard (developer of World of Warcraft), intentionally structure their games to be addictive.
So how do you know if someone has an addiction? It's an addiction when it begins to disrupt school and work and causes problems in your social life and most often happens to young men and boys. Specific symptoms include: spending most non-school or work hours on games, falling asleep in school or at work, lying about your game usage, becoming irritable, anger, or depressed when not playing, dropping out of other activities, becoming more hostile in your daily life, and feelings of euphoria when playing. Physical symptoms associated with excessive game play include: carpal tunnel syndrome, back and neck aches, dry eyes, migraine headaches, and neglect of personal hygiene. Gaming causes dopamine production to double, accounting for the euphoric state during game play. According to experts, gamers exhibit classic withdrawal symptoms: anxiety, panic attacks, sleep disorders.
The problem with treating gaming addictions is that you can't simply take away a computer. Kids are using them for homework, everyone uses them for email, shopping, research. And, it may be even tougher to get someone to admit that they have an addiction to games-my son, for example, always points to the fact that he is communicating with his friends while he is on the game. But, even though the gamers may be talking to friends over the Internet, they are not physically with other people; they are choosing isolation and this isolation is a classic symptom of addiction.
About a year ago, a clinic opened in China specifically to treat people with gaming addictions and just recently another one opened in Amsterdam. Some question whether or not obsessive gaming can be classified as an addiction as it is not physically addictive. However, other experts classify it as a clinical impulse control disorder, similar to gambling or compulsive shopping.
What can you, as a parent do, is keep your kids from becoming addicted to games or to help them beat an addiction? Dr. Orzack recommends cognitive behavior therapy, supports groups and, for some, medication. Cognitive behavior therapy teaches patients to identify the problem, solve the problem and helps them learn coping skills to prevent relapse. Antidepressants may be necessary to treat the depression associated with withdrawal and Zyban (which is used to treat nicotine addiction) can also be used. Parents recommend the following steps: impose strict time limits on your child's computer/game system usage, don't let children have computers or game systems in their bedrooms, provide alternatives, and removing the games from the computer system and destroying the disks. You may even need to hid the CPU or game system until the addicted child is able to use it responsibly.
The first step to beating any addiction is to get the addict to admit that they have an addiction. Hearing it from their peers will probably be more effective than hearing it from a parent. In the case of World of Warcraft, the web site www.wowdetox.com will allow the addict to read what others are saying about their addiction. Hopefully, your addict will recognize themselves in this forum and real healing can begin.
Published by Lisa Sheppard
Lisa Sheppard has degrees in Business Administration and Fashion Merchandising. She has three children. She likes to write children's stories and poetry and also writes articles about parenting, consumer i... View profile
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- www.twitchguru.com/2006/08/08/world_of_warcraft_players_addicted/, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_addiction, www.computeraddiction.com, www.olganon.org (which also has a 12-step program) wowdetox.com (forum for recovering World of Warcraft addicts)
- All game systems have some capacity for becoming addictive.
- World of Warcraft and other RPGs are more addictive than other games
- Experts are beginning to acknowledge this as an addiction.
10 Comments
Post a CommentEach person has their own experience with this type of behavior. I know a 18 year old who is so addicted he is failing out of college and it is only the second month. He has been playing the game for years and he has recently become furious with his friends who have decided to get girlfriends and stop playing the game. The kid has no self control%2C lost all responsibilities in life and will never grow out of this addiction. To say that it is normal for a 18 year old to be more obsessed with this game than looking for a girlfriend or even going out is wrong. To many studies prove the effect of this game on our youth. How would you feel having parents who do nothing but sit on the computer playing games. That is what we have to look forward to as these young people grow up. having children would be by accident%2C and probably in their sleep if not at the computer desk.
I have just come back to WoW after a month of absense... Why? Because I feel I can balance the game and college finally.
I have complete control over myself and can pull out of the game at any time to eat, do chores or study... I am part of a high-end raiding guild on the US-Central Illidan Server. I live on the east coast and as such I often end up needing to elave raids early for sleep. I found a guild that raids early in the days, so they end around normal eastern times.
I have felt that euphoric feeling raiding Hyjal again for the first time in what feels like forever... and yes, I do have some anxiety just before the end of class when I can return home and play... I think that's normal. Anyone will get anxious towarsd the end of a school day they have something they deem "sxciting" to look foward to.
I personally just think the media lieks targeting videogames and videogame "addcts" because ultra-conservative people get up in arms when someone DOES take it WAAAAY too far and
Fuk u Franklin Preston muthafuka sux a dick u racist bitch.
wow owns
As an interested bystander I can see the symptoms in a friends young son. Believe me - this is serious - He has allowed this game to dominate his life at just the time when he should be jointly working for his exams and chasing girls. Instead he sits in front of the computer ALL of his free time And when he does emerge he brings with him an appalling attitude for his mother.
I would not dream of blaming the manufacturers or anyone else but the boy himself
Excuse me, tyron. u should get the out of here. u do not have permission to talk because u are a nigger. :(
yeeeeeeeeeeeeah, son dis game du junk. i finna be killin da pigs and junk. i gos da 10 dai fre day acownt su i cood like play it and kill da pigs and junk. kno wut im sayin
Tiffany--obviously people need to take responsibility for their behavior. Of course, people shouldn't joing a raiding guild they don't have time for--the point is that they do, that they allow the guild to control their time, and that they aren't willing or able to understand that they have become unable to control themselves. Most people can probably play World of Warcraft (or Halo or any of the myriad of other computer or video games) without becoming "addicted." But there is scientific evidence that a small percentage of people who play will/have become addicts.
This is ridiculous. People who have "gaming" problems aren't addicted because the game itself is addictive, but because they want an excuse not to go to work or not to spend time with their families, etcetera... And most guilds are not as strict as people make them out to be and if you join a hardcore raiding guild and you don't have the time to keep up with them, then it's YOUR fault for joining. You join a guild that has flexible raiding times if you don't have a lot of time on your hands to play. You're supposed to plan the game around your real life, not your real life around the game and most non-hardcore raiding guilds understand this. If you don't have time to raid, DON'T JOIN A HARDCORE GUILD. It's simple as that. It's not Blizzard's fault, or the game's fault, or your mommy's fault for buying it for you, it's yours. When are people going to stop blaming objects for their problems? People blame a gun and not the idiot behind it. If you have a problem with WoW, it's probably you
Man, the time has come. I have played this game for less than a year now, and it has totally ruined my life. Last quarter I failed 2 courses, and I wasn't even in a raiding guild.
However, when I joined a raiding guild in July, my life was controleld my Warcraft. Also when I hit level 50 I went insane on the game too. It took me less than a week to get from level 50 to 60.
So I got lots of "loot" from this one raiding guild, raided Monday through Thursday and Sunday. Friday and Saturday were optional, as in stuff may/may not be going on.
So in October I joined a SUPER HARDCORE raiding guild, one that is pretty far into the Naxxramas 40-man instance. The mage-leader is nuts, and very anal also.
So, the time has come. I'm selling my account. I've started to develop something in my wrist, it hurts so bad when I play.
My studies are suffering, sadly.
This game screwed my life up, really. I'm in no way joking. You can be moderate about video game playing. I was always i