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March 22, 2006

An entire generation has grown up with a different set of games than any before it - and it plays these games in different ways. Will Wright explains how (video) games are unleashing the human imagination in Wired.

... It's a fundamentally different take on problem-solving than the linear, read-the-manual-first approach of their parents.

ed education and standardized testing, this generational difference might not yet be evident. But the gamers' mindset - the fact that they are learning in a totally new way - means they'll treat the world as a place for creation, not consumption. This is the true impact videogames will have on our culture.

Society, however, notices only the negative. Most people on the far side of the generational divide - elders - look at games and see a list of ills (they're violent, addictive, childish, worthless). Some of these labels may be deserved. But the positive aspects of gaming - creativity, community, self-esteem, problem-solving - are somehow less visible to nongamers.


Originally from Smart Mobs, remediated by yatta on Mar 22, 2006 at 09:52 AM