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Average Gamer Is 35, Fat and Bummed

kamapuaa writes "According to a study published in the upcoming October issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, the average US video game player is 35 years old, overweight, and tends toward depression. Specifically, female video game players tended towards depression, while males tended towards large BMIs. While the study itself points to several conclusions, one researcher noted: '... habitual use of video games as a coping response may provide a genesis for obsessive-compulsive video-game playing, if not video-game addiction.'" On the flip side, the Washington Post is running a story about the mental health benefits of playing video games.

3 of 439 comments (clear)

  1. Isn't the average US citizen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    35, Fat, and Bummed? Or something close?

  2. Re:Hmm... by sakdoctor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think you could probably replace gamer with "person" and still be accurate.
    At least in the developed world, where age distribution tends to bulge out at around 35-40. Waistlines bulge out at around the same time, just in time for a mid-life crisis.

  3. The Intelligent Design connection by Gord.ca · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess most people didn't catch the significance of Andrews University...

    Two of the study's coauthours (Wendi Kannenberg, Gary L. Hopkins) are from Andrews University Institute for Prevention of Addictions. Andrews is a Christian university run by a denomination which doesn't accept evolution. I've spoken to a prof from their biology department, apparently it's a bastion of the Intelligent Design movement. (Here's a book published by Andrews University Press).

    I'm not saying that proponents of intelligent design and those around them are incapable of doing serious scientific research. I'm thinking this might partially explain what feels like an anti-gamer bias.

    The joys of crowdsourcing...

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    The opinons expressed are those of the voices in the author's head and are not necessarily those of the author.