Ich heisse Jack Thompson.
I have to disagree on this subject. It seems to me that in a small percentage of people, playing violent video games does bring out violent behavior. There was a case out in the Midwest US where a teenager shot at passing cars on a highway with a shotgun, killing one person. He claimed he got the idea from playing Grand Theft Auto.
Certainly. It is also a widely known fact that in a small percentage of people, driving a car brings out violent behaviour called "road rage". What should we do about that? Ban the cars?
It's not everyone's problem. It's a problem to those who suffer from this personality defect or whatever it is, and the solution is not to ban driving a car.
In video games' question, it's also not an aceptable solution to ban one type of games altogether. Age limits are necessary, I have to agree on that just like they are necessary on movies and stuff, but in historical context there has always been potential nutcases. Something will always bring out "violent behaviour" of these said potential nutcases, be it the face of the student sitting next to you, or playing video games, or driving a car or what ever.
I think violent games must be put onto a context here. Media is full of violence. There are sports in which the main goal is to incapacitate the opponent (for real, not just digitally mind you!). The message in the media is that violence is not a serious business in overall, it's not limited to games. Yet these flower-hat aunties and jackthompsons concentrate on video/computer games, as if they were the source of all violent behaviour in society. Interactiveness is blamed to have greater effect than non-interactive gore in media, but I disagree.
Besides, the amount of gore in the game is not really the important point. If there's violence, it remains the same even if the graphical gory pictures are limited.
In fact, limiting the gore may only make things worse, at least according to some opinions of these jackthompsons. They claim that some people become unable to separate reality from violent game, or that they don't understand that a person dies if he or she is severely cut, or for example kicked below the chin hard enough. Wouldn't limiting the effects of violence only increase this separation from reality? I mean, if there is allowed to be killing, shooting and stuff, but there's no blood... and if the games really have that big an impact on kids... How could they understand that when you stab someone or shoot someone, he'll bleed
plenty, since there are no such things as "just a flesh wound".
If all, the existing violence in games should be made
as disgusting and real as possible in order to make the players look at it in revulsion.

</semisarcastic>
Personally I dislike games in which violence is the end itself. That's why I don't play online FPS games. If there's a good story and viable motives behind the character doing the killings, I can enjoy the game, like in Halo and Halo 2, and some others. Otherwise I prefer flight sims and space shooters. Total War series also kicks some serious butt.
I don't think it's logical to say that we can or will stop all violence in video games, but we do need better regulation of who buys them. Stores need to be held liable for selling exceedingly violent games, like GTA, to underage players. We also need to educate parents in a more effective manner about the possible dangers of playing extremely violent games. We can't just go around saying "Don't buy your under 17 kids violent games, that's bad, bad, bad." It's the same argument that Health teachers used to tell teens not to have sex, "Don't do it, it's bad, bad, bad." Nagging people like that just makes them not care, or at worst, go out and do said behavior.
On this paragraph I fully, whole-heartedly agree. Except that it needs to be the parents doing the most supervising of their kids, but obviously the shops should also have more strict policies on to whom they sell the games.
The problem seems to be to make the parents actually look after their kids. Kids may not appreciate it (I know I didn't at the time) but that's how the thing is. If the parents neglect their children, eventually someone will have to set them limits, and in my opinion the government/state is not supposed to be setting that kind of limits to people. Laws are a matter in themselves, but when the state starts to involve itself in tellign parents how their children should be raised you aren't very far from state-organized brainwashing.
I don't know how much more unclearly I could've said things. Oh well.
Pre-Posting Edit.
Last two comments had about the same points in them, but in a better and more condensed form.
