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Only 15% of Gamers are Internet Addicts

Huckster writes "Jeffrey Parsons - a doctoral candidate from University of Iowa has resently conducted a research on MMORPG addiction. It took a while to get the results - but they are now available. The study found that about 15% of gamers meet the criteria for Internet addiction as provided by Kimberly Young, a leading researcher in Internet addiction. Using more strict criteria, a minimum of at least 10% of gamers met criteria for Internet addiction. Compared to national studies of Internet addiction, this numbers are somewhat elevated. However, given the sheer number of hours MMORPG gamers spend online (in comparison to the general population), even a 15% addiction rate is somewhat low. To illustrate the point, the college student spends 10 hours on the Internet per week. The average MMORPG gamer (addicted or not) spends 20-25 hours per week just playing MMORPGs, and an additional 10-15 hours per week in other Internet use. In other words, MMORPG players are spending 4x as much time online as non-gamers."

13 of 451 comments (clear)

  1. Bit of a strawman (I think), however... by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    If 15% of people who enjoyed a cold beer or a glass of wine were considered alcoholics I'm sure the word "only" wouldn't be in the headline.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Bit of a strawman (I think), however... by Golias · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Lots of people spend 20-30 hours or more a week watching TV, and most of society considers this to be perfectly normal.

      During softball season, I spend close to 10 hours a week either playing games or practicing fastpitch softball, and I'm considered a very "casual" player in my league. Some people spend more time playing softball than they spend at their jobs.

      In High School, I knew a guy who spent almost every evening and every weekend hacking and wardialing for hours on end. These days, he's gainfully employed in the IT field.

      "Does something a lot" != "Addicted"

      The only thing which makes a person who spends 30 hours a week playing a game different from most people is that their chosen form of recreation happens to be a fringe activity. They are not hurting anybody, so I say leave them the hell alone.

      Furthermore, can we get past this stupid habbit of calling every apparant obsessive/compulsive behavior an "addiction?" It's not as if these people are going to go through withdrawl symptoms if they are deprived of their gaming "fix" for a couple weeks.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    2. Re:Bit of a strawman (I think), however... by 88NoSoup4U88 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Very well said indeed... untill the last line :

      Furthermore, can we get past this stupid habbit of calling every apparant obsessive/compulsive behavior an "addiction?"

      Addiction, by defenition, is :
      - Compulsive physiological and psychological need for a habit-forming substance.
      - The condition of being habitually or compulsively occupied with or or involved in something.

      So calling "apparent obsessive/compulsive behaviour" an addiction, is only because that -is- the defenition of it :
      I do agree with him though ; that 'spending alot of time' does not equal addiction.

      It's not as if these people are going to go through withdrawl symptoms if they are deprived of their gaming "fix" for a couple weeks.

      That's only true if you are comparing withdrawal symptons from, let's say, heroine addiction, to the withdrawal symptons from missing out on a month of RPG-ing.

      Hell, even I really long for playing a (FPS) game when I haven't done so for a week.

    3. Re:Bit of a strawman (I think), however... by Golias · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is where I have a problem with all the puritanical crap out there.

      According to medical research, one or two pints of beer (or glasses of red wine) per night is a healthy practice, reducing the chances of heart disease and alzeimer's while reducing stress.

      According to AA, two or three pints a night means you are an alcoholic.

      There's an overlap here, which means either 1) One side or the other is full of crap, or 2) Mild alcoholism is good for you.

      In either case, I enjoy beer or wine with my dinner on a regular basis, and if that makes me a drunkard then so be it.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  2. Interesting.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It took a while to get the results...

    Perhaps somebody was fooling around on the INTERNET when they should have been working?

    Jeez, I'm one to talk...

  3. Well.... by MightyPez · · Score: 5, Funny

    Gotta do something to fill the void of loneliness. And sometimes a steady regiment of Hotpockets, Mountain Dew, and cigarettes simply won't do.

  4. Why always focus on MMOPRGs? by filmmaker · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The net mean age in the survey is more telling, I think, than the subject of the survey: MMORPG gamers.

    ~ 23 or 24 appears to be the net mean age of all survey groups, and in my experience, and as someone from that generation, we spend a lot of time online for many different reasons.

    I'm a programmer and an information junkie who's never played a MMORPG in his life. When I was interviewed for my job last year, I was told the company was looking for someone who "lives on the web." All these people focusing on games don't realize the most obvious phenomenon: the web as a lifestyle.

  5. They're designed to be that way. by ShortedOut · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Every game made today..
    The first level is easy to accomplish.
    Second level is marginally harder.

    Before long, you have to press the lever 10,000 times to get your treat. By that time, you've grown old, wife left, dog died.. etc.

    The games are DESIGNED to addict you. You don't make subscription money if you don't have a good core base of addicts.

    MMORPG's are designed to last for years. The more addicting, and the ability to constantly provide rewards througout the game, will keep a guy hemmed up for years.

  6. Hate the word "addiction" by goldspider · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Slightly OT rant:

    Why is every bad habit these days assigned a diagnosis of "addiction"?

    I'll tell you why. Because if we can blame our bad habits on a disease, something out of our control, then we can absolve ourselves of any responsibility for it.

    Face it, most of these purely psychological "addictions" that plague modern society can be corrected with a little behavior modification and a little willpower.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  7. Re:Only 15% of Doctoral Canidates are useful by Scarblac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Speak for yourself. Back in the day when I was a MUD addict, it cost me about seven years of my life. About four years playing and doing nothing else, three more of depression when I had finally kicked it. Needed several psychologists to finally get back on my feet. It was a very big problem, I was aware of it and miserable, and unable to stop.

    --
    I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
  8. definition of Internet Addiction by fantail · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Kimberly Young definition of internet addiction: http://www.netaddiction.com/whatis.htm

  9. My favorite thing is... by EulerX07 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When someone tells you that you have a problem because you played a game (MMORPG or not) between 6:00PM and 10:00PM the night before. And what did these people do during the same timeframe last night? They watched TV.

    Gone on the road for two weeks, working 14 days straight for a total of 145 hours. Come back and play with friends on an afternoon, what's the verdict: I play too much videogames.

    It really is mainly about some people's perception of valid use of your free time. My rule of thumb is not to tell any woman born before 1980 that I even know what a computer is.

  10. unsubscribed from WOW by awasim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I unsubscribed from world of warcraft yesterday. I'm a weekend player, but my friends/roommates are truly addicted to the game. Seeing them play day in and day out just made me hate the game. They go to college, and well, at least one of them is gonna flunk classes this semester due to that game. I have work during the week which leaves no time for the game, and well, I want to do something other than stare at a screen on the weekends. Anybody else unsubscribe from WoW for this reason?