theage.com.au— China's growing band of young internet gamers will face virtual penalties if they stay online for more than three hours, under a new set of rules to combat cyber addiction published today.
Apr 10, 2007View in Crawl 4
Recent news about China has one policy that gamers under 13 will face an anti-addiction rule that is supposed to drag them away from their Internet games. I am glad that I have passed that age ten years ago and as an adult, I can play games freely. But if this ban took into effect ten years ago, that would: 1. Make me go to a better university, maybe TsingHua University, because I was addicted in Westwood's C&C at that moment, and was tired of studying and preparing for the National University Enrolment Test of "Big 5" (Chinese, Chemistry, Mathematics, English, Physics), and2. Make me a bad gamer...Umm, which one is better? :-)
synyanApr 29, 2007
Recent news about China has one policy that gamers under 13 will face an anti-addiction rule that is supposed to drag them away from their Internet games. I am glad that I have passed that age ten years ago and as an adult, I can play games freely. But if this ban took into effect ten years ago, that would: 1. Make me go to a better university, maybe TsingHua University, because I was addicted in Westwood's C&C at that moment, and was tired of studying and preparing for the National University Enrolment Test of "Big 5" (Chinese, Chemistry, Mathematics, English, Physics), and2. Make me a bad gamer...Umm, which one is better? :-)