ONLINE GAMES to become a winner
Kids Online
Most online games, despite the rating, are not for kids. Online games like Poisenville
lend themselves to the more mature audience, in the sense that kids will not
understand what they see and hear. Online games can quickly become cesspools of
human maturity if the wrong people get involved, and this is likely. Poor
language and harsh judgments are ammunition all the same, and fill up an
immature player’s arsenal like the imaginary bullets being shot across the map.
Exposure of this nature can easily lead to detrimental effects on a kid’s
psyche. They can pick up the habits and vices of the less mature players, and
infuse them into their own persona. These habits and flaws can be very ugly at
times.
No matter how innocent the game, if there is an online aspect in which there is
player interaction there is potential for some disturbing communication. The
anonymity of online games tempts players into unleashing an ugly side. No matter
how fictional the personality, it can be real to others. Kids are prone to this
kind of belief. They won’t be able to tell who is faking and who is sincere. In
either case the young gamer would probably learn words and notions they will not
be able to fully grasp.
It is hard to tell which game won’t turn into a battleground of malicious
language. Arguments are aplenty and explode out of nowhere. The fights are
almost always about something petty and trivial, but can be as angry and heated
as a brawl. The kid is playing the game to have fun and explore an impossible
world. There is no need for the judgment of others in a fictional world.
Luckily, most games offer some communications censoring and monitoring. A parent
can easily disable input from other players so that the child may never hear a
thing anyone else says. This can save face for many games.