The Gang of Five
Beyond the Mysterious Beyond => Hobbies and Recreation => Gamers Zone => Topic started by: pokeplayer984 on January 20, 2014, 01:35:11 PM
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Check out this video. Here's something we can throw at all those anti-gamers out there.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOsqkQytHOs (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOsqkQytHOs)
Yeah for video games! :)
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That was an interesting video. I will have to read the cited studies later in order to assess the full implications of their findings.
I can kind of relate to this video due to some of the events that I went through during my early childhood years. During those years I had noticeable delays in certain developmental milestones due to being born over two months premature and being on the autism spectrum. When I was a small child a pediatrician actually recommended that my parents encourage me to play video games like Super Mario Brothers in order to improve my hand-eye coordination, which was much poorer than what it should have been at that stage of development. During my next several appointment my test results had improved markedly.
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I've been recently hired as a tax preparer/office tech support/business-to-business marketer despite being completely untrained or qualified in any of these fields.
I believe that video games played a huge role in how I learned to see the world. In particular, the Adventure games I used to play that relied almost entirely on puzzles involving using objects in unusual ways, it really helped me develop a sense of creativity. I'm constantly solving problems at work by using the tools at hand in unusual or unorthodox ways (those hypochondriac printers!), and I know that those old adventure games were some of the first experiences I had with that form of problem-solving.
In addition, my skill as a tax preparer can almost entirely be attributed to my hours of meticulously learning every single numerical aspect of Team Fortress 2 so I could optimize my loadout and performance for competitive play. It taught me how to see the rules from multiple points of view and understand that you can't beat a system without learning it inside and out.
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I guess playing video games can be good for various helping with various things.
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Well, this is a good thing to keep tucked away. Just as long as nobody learns to drive from video games, it's all good.
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Unless it is done as a very realistic car simulator, which would take up quite a bit of room.