Ectheliontnacil wrote: »WrathOfInnos wrote: »I think ZoS is offering a quitting aid. It is called “Murkmire Patch” and will be hitting live servers in a few weeks.
Haha it's that bad eh? ^^
WrathOfInnos wrote: »I think ZoS is offering a quitting aid. It is called “Murkmire Patch” and will be hitting live servers in a few weeks.
Ectheliontnacil wrote: »Hey everyone!
I'd like to discuss the topic of gaming addiction in this thread. Gaming had a great impact on my life and for this reason I'd really like to help anyone going through the same thing. Sadly I don't think I can help and neither can ZOS, only the person who is addicted can truly do something about it. However it is in ZOS' power to put a couple "safety nets" in place (e.g. time restrictions, temp bans, overview over your playing behaviour) AND they could offer some help to addicts in the form of counselling or by merely suggesting that one should see a professional about their gaming addiction (after your time in game exceeds say 5 hrs a day on average).
I have played the game over 5,5k hours, that's over 200 days, comes close to 2/3 of a year spent in game! Some may be shocked at the sheer amount of time I have on my eso account while others may have played the game for even longer. It's just a number, the point is however, it was enough to affect my personal life (in a very bad way of course).
There were periods of time where I spent pretty much every free minute thinking about what I'd do in eso once I got home. I was unable to focus on "real" goals in life due to my addiction and my personal life deteriorated very rapidly over the course of the last 2 years or so.
Even though I'd already been playing the game for roughly 2 years prior to the start of university, that's when eso really became a problem for me. I didn't really have a set timetable anymore, so I was free to play to my hearts content. By the end of the first semester I'd given up on my studies completely and didn't spend any time at all learning outside of lectures, some time hanging out with friends and the rest playing eso. At the start of the second semester I dropped out, because I had zero enthusiasm to further pursue law (which is what I'd studied).
Funny thing is, I felt awful the entire year. Guilty because of my endless procrastination and unhappy with pretty much every aspect of my life. I wanted to quit so badly! But I wasn't able to do it. So I carried on playing, all the while sinking deeper into a bottomless pit of despair, until I hit rock bottom. In July I spent like a week on an emperor run/decorating spree, I don't know how many hours I played a day. Anyways after getting emp, decorating my house (sth I'd always wanted to do) in a really awesome way, did I feel a sense of accomplishment? No!
I didn't feel satisfied or happy, after all I hadn't actually accomplished anything. Instead I felt exhausted, weak and utterly disappointed.
I realised then how pathetic I had become. I was a slave to the game, unable to let it go even for a second, condemned to an eternity spent in the harsh glow of my computer screen. All the time I was frantically searching the game for meaning, for a purpose, without realising that there was none...
I'd how exactly it happened, but I've since completely lost the motivation to play. Haven't been online once since the beginning of July, it seems I was finally able to let it go. I started doing sports again, started a new course at university, developed some "healthy" hobbies etc. Basically I feel a lot better now, doesn't change the fact that I lost a year of my life, but at least I can move forwards now.
The point is if I hadn't burnt out, I would still be playing the game, possibly for years to come. I'd absolutely destroy my future and Zeni would be perfectly happy to take my money from crown store items and crates while watching me squandering my life on PvP gameplay. That thought is frightening to me!
I have an addictive personality I guess and should have therefore never been let near an MMO. I know that it's my own problem and that it's not ZOS' job to help useless losers who 24/7 the game. However there's laws in place to regulate the effects of other addictive substances/practices on society (mainly by banning them in the case of drugs and gambling for example). And imo gaming/youtube etc. can be even worse than drugs. Gaming can slowly take over people's lives until they are completely lost inside a virtual world.
I think Zeni does have a certain responsibility towards their customers, they should offer help, warn and possibly take actions against severely addictive behaviour. If you play 20 hrs a day, your account should be banned (*** call the psychiatrist while you're at it), you are sick, that's just how it is! There's too few regulations in place to combat gaming addiction, mainly because people don't take it seriously. If were not careful younger generations could very well go to "waste" because they're all indoctrinated with fortnite and stuff...if Zeni and other companies don't take measures themselves, they might soon suffer the repercussions.
I know it's not in their immediate financial interest to discourage addicts from playing. But it's morally despicable and very dangerous in the long run.
Anyways sorry for rambling on, it's late... xD
. Share your stories if you like and let me know what you think.
Ectheliontnacil wrote: »However it is in ZOS' power to put a couple "safety nets" in place (e.g. time restrictions, temp bans, overview over your playing behaviour)
sadly it's not just you. Its everyone around you addicted. It's not your fault it's society problem. We're living in a tech world, it's invading our brains feeding/ stimulating them, it's hard to resist. Technology is really a bad thing, Tv's, gaming, phones ect. We're loosing connection with nature, we're becoming more depressed. We're eating garbage, just because we cant make food from natural only products, we go to watch tv, gaming, instead. Everything speeds up so fast, it's so hard for us to catch up, to build a resistance. Sometimes I wish there would be a society kinda like amish where's no tech , no electricity, but would accept outsiders that are living wrong lives.
Juju_beans wrote: »sadly it's not just you. Its everyone around you addicted. It's not your fault it's society problem. We're living in a tech world, it's invading our brains feeding/ stimulating them, it's hard to resist. Technology is really a bad thing, Tv's, gaming, phones ect. We're loosing connection with nature, we're becoming more depressed. We're eating garbage, just because we cant make food from natural only products, we go to watch tv, gaming, instead. Everything speeds up so fast, it's so hard for us to catch up, to build a resistance. Sometimes I wish there would be a society kinda like amish where's no tech , no electricity, but would accept outsiders that are living wrong lives.
Working in technology was my career. Technology is a great thing when used as a tool.
The internet alone opened the world to so many people when it went public with a user interface.
Games, movies but also books, encyclopedias, archives you'd never be able to physically access, convenience (bill paying & banking).
The question you always need to ask yourself though...tool or crutch ?
I never had any issues quitting these things..
Sylvermynx wrote: »
Um. Electricity? Like no lights, no hot water, no cooking? Seriously.... I don't do cell phones (eh - no connection here at the house, besides I hate the damn things), and I could certainly live without tv (though husband couldn't - don't get me started....) Radio? We don't get radio here.
We have occasional 36 hour outages (like a year ago, when a human-started fire took out our power lines). You know what I worry about? The food in the freezers and refrigerators. We lost about $1k food during that fire - because some *** didn't bother to think before he lighted a fire in a "NO FIRE" zone. Yep, the SOB is in jail now.... but I still had to replace all that food y'know?
Games. Right. In the middle of a major power outage, I'm worrying about games. No. Not. Never. Sheesh. Before that power outage in the summer? The previous one was in the middle of February, it was nearly 60 hours, it was below zero most nights, we had no heat other than the fireplace, we COOKED over the fireplace, and no I was NOT thinking about not being able to play a damn game!
Jeezus.