Forums › Life › Computers, Gadgets & Technology › Video & Computer Games › War games: Do we really need them?
Right, I’m not a fan of war games. I’m of the book war is not something to enjoy, and make children think is acceptable, because it ain’t.
What does everyone else think?
I think it is a reflection of something rather sad (in line with morality) in the human schema but better to be acknowledged than to be denied.
or you could argue its more a symbol of how safe we all are that we get our kicks from light rather than real blood (apart from the handful of canon fodder who enlist)
I don’t see computer games as a problem.
Most of the people playing them are actually relatively peacable folk who’d shit bricks if/when they find themselves in situations of actual violence, whilst those what can really do damage to others either won’t bother with computers as “too nerdy” (as they are just unintelligent thugs) or (if they do have brains) would use them instead for stuff like working out how to make a real bomb rather than blowing up pixels on screen.
LOL
bet ya didn’t know hello kitty had one of there
@Gazatronium-Ethane 404314 wrote:
bet ya didn’t know hello kitty had one of there
do you have to tax a chainsaw?
no, but you DO need a licence
Hi all ,
I dont think computer games are a problem , i also played war games as a child and was always about good winning over evil . At least no one dies in a computer game , and if you get hit you just re-spawn .
No its the people that have a fascination of guns and big knifes that worry me . I bet we all know of or have met some one like this . America is copletely mad as i was chatting to a man out there that sleeps will a loaded magnum under his pillow ? HHHmmmm one little accident with that puppy and his gonna wake up with a head ache !!!!! or no head !!!!! .
I love that chain saw , i mean its really girly but who is gonna take the mick when your reving it in front of them lol .
regards
mungo
i like them
nuff said
when chaps like me and mungo were boys we all had toy guns and played at soldiers.
my Dad was really proud of his time of National Service in Malaya (this kept going well after independence and has recently been reintroduced) – and spent his life with a bit of a chip on his shoulder that he had not been able to single-handedly kick out all the Japs from his country during the war.
The war ended when he was 3 :laugh_at:
Hi General Lighting ,
Your Dad sounds like a hell of a guy , good on him lol . And yes we all played army as kids , plastic gun or a stick no matter the sound effects were always the same lol .
Regards
Mungo
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Forums › Life › Computers, Gadgets & Technology › Video & Computer Games › War games: Do we really need them?