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Nearly every US kid a gamer

2008-09-17 13:00
line

Chicago - A new survey finds that nearly all young Americans play video games, showing just how ingrained the technology has become in youth culture.

The national survey from the Pew Internet & American Life Project shows that both boys and girls play video games at high rates, although not necessarily the same kind. And they don't just play by themselves. Nearly two-thirds play video games to socialise face-to-face with friends and family, while just over a quarter said they play with internet friends.

"It shows that gamers are social people," says Amanda Lenhart, a senior researcher at Pew who led the report on the survey. "They communicate just as much. They spend time face-to-face, just as much as other kids. They e-mail and text."

The survey, released on Tuesday, combined the telephone responses from a nationally representative sample of 1 102 young people, ages 12 to 17, and their parents. Performed from November 2007 through February of this year, and partly funded by the MacArthur Foundation, it had a margin of error of three percentage points.

Among other things, the survey found that:

  • Ninety-seven percent of young respondents play video games. That's 99% of boys and 94% of girls, with little difference in the percentages among various racial and ethnic groups and incomes. In fact, seven percent of those surveyed said they didn't have a computer at home, but did have a game console, such as Sony Corp's PlayStation, Microsoft Corp's Xbox or Nintendo Co's Wii.

    - They play often. When surveyed, half of the respondents said they had played a video game the previous day.

    - Their games of choice are as diverse as their tastes in music or TV. Eighty percent of respondents play five or more different game genres, with racing, puzzles, sports and action the most common. Favourites were Guitar Hero, Halo 3, Madden NFL, solitaire and Dance Dance Revolution.

    Pew researchers said they want to steer clear of depicting video games as "good" or "bad", says Joseph Kahne, a study co-author and dean of the education school at Mills College in California.

    He noted, for instance, that even games with violent content, such as Halo, provided "more than average opportunities for players to help one another".

    Kahne also looked at games' effect on civic engagement, anything from political involvement to raising money for charity. He found that those who spent the most time playing video games weren't any less likely to be involved in their communities.

    The survey did, however, find that those who played games in face-to-face social settings were more likely to say they were committed to civic participation.

    Mimi Ito, an anthropologist who studies the use of new media, said more research is needed to explain this phenomenon. But she speculates the ties that gamers make with "real-life local friends" stimulate civic engagement.

    "Gaming is the reason to get together - but they're probably talking about other things," says Ito, who's based at the University of Southern California's Annenberg Center of Communication.

    For this and other reasons, Ito cautioned parents against negative stereotypes about video games.

    How young people play a game, she says, is as important as what they play.

    To that end, Jesse Schell, a professor of entertainment technology at Carnegie Mellon University, hoped the report would encourage parents to learn more about the video games their children play.

    "If more parents would take the time to play the same things their children are playing - or even better, play with them - it would benefit both parents and children," says Schell, who teaches video game design.

    About a third of parents who were surveyed said they play video games with their children some or all of the time. Most of those parents are younger than 40, part of a generation that grew up playing video games themselves.

    Kimberly Coleman, a 35-year-old mom and blogger in New York City, was a fan of Pac-Man and Donkey Kong as a kid. She now plays video games with her four-year-old son, but only those with physical activity, such as Wii Sports, or an educational component.

    "Growing up with video games made me more hesitant to have a gaming system in our home," says Coleman, who doesn't want her kids to become "couch potatoes".

    That's why Graden, back in Chicago, likes her Wii Fit. She's also started playing Guitar Hero with her buddies, though, though she's a little miffed it has only a few girl characters. "They dress, like, really sleazy," she says. "It's sort of weird."

    Graden also plays the Wii with her mom, but only after she hits the books and practices her French horn.

    "For me," she says, "it's always schoolwork first."

    - SAPA

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