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In the Gold Mine  added on Jul 10 2008
by Sol Invictus, Level 54
Last updated at February 6, 2009, 12:56 pm
It's not uncommon these days to find an article that discusses the addictive qualities of an MMORPG or Massively Multiplayer Online game. We often read about how these games destroy relationships and livelihoods. 

photography
MMO addiction
There is just no denying that MMOs can be harmful to psychologically dependant individuals, and it isn't a point I intend to contest. Plenty of research into the subject has proven just that, and clinics exist all over Western Europe to treat the very addiction.

That MMOs are dangerously addictive and potentially ruinous is a sentiment that I can agree with, as MMO addiction is a bad situation that I can actually relate to on a personal level, based on my experience with games of the genre.

Unlike chemical addictions like alcohol, cigarettes and other substances, the addiction to an MMO is not physical. However, it is both emotional and psychological. The MMO tends to fill in a gap hitherto left vacant by an unfulfilling social life. MMOs can, in many ways, bring some sense of false emotional satisfaction to the user. The addiction to MMOs can be difficult to overcome.    

guild wars papier mache
Guild Wars Papier Mache
An artistic hobby that's
more fun than playing the game itself
To indulge in an MMO is to indulge in an activity that simply makes pulp out of your free time by chewing you up from the inside out. It's an activity that's arguably self-destructive, especially when it starts to eat into the time you'd spend cultivating your social life, work life or the leisure time you'd spend doing other things, like reading, writing or spending time on any number of other productive hobbies.

An MMO can essentially replace your social life (be it online or offline), depending on how immersed you are within the game's "community". When you've got no social life or friends outside of an insular MMO server, it's hard to give it up because it becomes the only life you know. The friends with whom you spend your time in an MMO are nowhere to be found outside of the "realm"; if they're just as addicted as you are, you won't even find them on an instant messenger. Essentially, the MMO becomes the user's only window to a sorry excuse for a social life.

books
Books to read
More emotionally engaging than guild
drama
With all that I said in mind, when you're hooked, how do you quit?

Personally, I have been fortunate that my experiences with MMOs have turned out to be less than satisfactory. Unfriendly communities in addition to broken or downright arduous (grind-based) gameplay mechanics are perfectly good reasons to stop playing an MMO.

It's not too difficult for one to walk away when the MMOs in question make you feel uncomfortably anxious as you play. Stripped of its cathartic qualities, a broken game with an unfriendly community can make anyone feel all but unwelcome. That anyone would continue to commit themselves to a game, no matter how unpleasant simply beggars belief.

If you're currently an addict who intends to quit, or know someone who is addicted to an MMO, here are some thoughts you can think about which may make the decision to quit an easier one to make:

  • painting miniatures
    Warhammer Miniatures
    An expensive hobby, but at least you'll have  something to show for it.
    Burnout - Is it satisfying to actually spend an entire weekend grinding Reputation points for that 'exalted' status with a faction, or harvesting materials for crafting some useless piece of equipment? Are you even having fun anymore? 
  • Time Commitment - Consider the amount of time you're spending in an MMO and reflect upon it. Is it worth it to spend 6 hours a night in World of Warcraft when you could be spending that time doing something more productive? You could be spending time reading, indulging in a productive hobby, or even spending some time out with your family and friends. Life is short, so why squander it? If you need to play a game for hours upon hours to get anything out of it, it's a good reason to stop playing it because it simply isn't worth it.
  • Real Life Commitment - Is playing World of Warcraft getting in the way of your real life commitments? Are you neglecting your significant other to spend more time with your guild? Is staying up late causing you arrive late for work or class every other day? Is it more satisfying to kill a raid boss than it is to wake up to a warm cup of coffee prepared by your loved one? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then you need to look deep into yourself and think about the things that really matter.  
  • Fun Time vs Boring Time - Are you at the point where you are spending exponentially larger numbers of hours trying to get your "fix"? If the ratio of the amount of time you're having fun is significantly disparate to the amount of time you're feeling bored by the game, then it's time to question why you're still playing the game. Why spend time in an MMO when you can spend less than an hour in a game like Team Fortress 2, Left 4 Dead or any number of single and multiplayer games and feel sated by the experience? 
  • photography
    Photography
    A worthwhile indulgence
    No Spontaneous Gratification - Why are you even playing this game if you have to spend several hours in it just to get anything out of it? 
  • Having trouble keeping up? - If you find yourself having trouble keeping up with your guild mates and other players in an MMORPG, consider yourself lucky. Quit while you're behind. 
  • Meta-gaming - If you find you aren't a game designer, but you find yourself talking about how to down a raid boss for hours without end, or spend days researching the best "build" for your character class, then you need to examine who you are. Is this the person you want to become? Do you want to be a WOW-nerd
  • Are others quitting? - If your guild-mates are complaining that they're spending too much time in the game, just take it as a sign.
  • Culture - If you think it's okay to make racist and sexist jokes because everyone does it in the Barrens Chat or refer to everyone else as '****' or suffix terms for them with '-***', then it's time to quit before you genuinely become a socially unacceptable person. 
  • Guild Drama - If playing a game causing isyou more grief than any experience you might go through in the real world, just ask yourself, "Is this worth it?"

Why not spend some time on a relatively free and easy dungeon crawler, or put yourself to the challenge with a really difficult game? You might even get more out of an hour of playing Oregon Trail than you would with several hours of an MMO.

     
30 comments
jinstevens
jinstevens Feb 6, 2009 at 2:01 pm
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I've quit quite a number of MMOs, including ones that I played for years.

Some of the reasons I quit that are sort of covered by your article:

* Been there, done that - sort of like burnout, but more of a feeling of ennui that even new content looks suspiciously like the stuff you've already seen. That's what got me to leave City of Heroes after two years.

* Maximum effort for incremental gain - I really don't get WoW's high end raid culture. I've heard stories of how some gamers raid month after months only because they need to have a slighter better pair of pants. When a game takes too much time for minor character improvement, I really take a hard look at the cost benefits of continuing.

* Game sessions *have to* extend more than 20 or 30 minutes - this is the point that kills games for me because I'm married. My wife has close to a zero tolerance level when she calls me to dinner (that she prepared even though she works full time) and I tell her it will be another hour before the raid, boss, save point is complete/done.  Games that have stuck around for the long haul with me are those that I can play hours on end, but can also be enjoyed in small increments. BTW, my wife's solution to missing my dinner call is to dump it in the garbage if I don't show up within 10 minutes. Hunger can be a powerful teacher. :P

Anyways, Sol, a very interesting read.
jibegod
jibegod Feb 7, 2009 at 9:09 am
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Sol Invictus
Sol Invictus Feb 7, 2009 at 9:24 am
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jinstevens
jinstevens Feb 7, 2009 at 10:42 am
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No, lol, I meant wife. And she's very tolerant of my gaming habits most of the time. I'm the one that goes over the line at times. And in our household, we split cooking chores. Same rule goes for her if she's too caught up in Grey's Anatomy or something like that. She can always record it.
Sablewind
Sablewind Mar 11, 2009 at 1:29 pm
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I guess the McDreamy and McSteamy have their addictive qualities as well eh.
Zombiemachine
Zombiemachine Feb 6, 2009 at 2:12 pm
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Every time I get the urge to pick up a MMO game "everyone is talking about", I just go to the pub or a concert instead. Seriously.
Diablo 3 will be the only exception. Not that it will be a MMO, but it will be a waste of life I can live with.
Snail
Snail Feb 6, 2009 at 3:32 pm
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I'd actually be quite interested to hear about these treatment facilities you mention. Do you have a link?
Sol Invictus
Sol Invictus Feb 6, 2009 at 4:33 pm
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Indeed. Here's an MMO treatment clinic that opened in China. 

Here's an article on GameSpy the opening of Europe's first game addiction clinic.  BBC has the same story. A much newer report, also from the clinic, says that 90% of the people who sought help at the clinic were not actual addicts, merely compulsive gamers. 

The new report is particularly enlightening, because it says that most of treating their problems can just be a matter of dealing with the other problems they have in their lives. Games are just a hobby or an escape for them, rather than an addiction. 

Of course, the remaining 10% are genuinely addicted to the MMOs and give up their social lives, jobs and relationships for the game. Ouch. 
Silvast
Silvast Feb 7, 2009 at 4:25 pm
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A lot of people say that if you get addicted to computer games it's because you have a problem, you can't manage your time, etc. But I think it's more complex than that.

During the first year of my undergrad studies, I used to play a lot of WoW. I had terrible grades. When I quit playing my grades gradually went up. Maybe I was too immature, maybe I couldn't manage my time. All I know is that MMOs are a huge time sink if you want to be successful.

If you wanna read my story, take a look at this blog post.
Sol Invictus
Sol Invictus Feb 7, 2009 at 4:46 pm
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Thanks for sharing your experience with us.
Nobbeh
Nobbeh Feb 7, 2009 at 4:56 pm
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ErrantDebacle
ErrantDebacle Feb 7, 2009 at 9:05 pm
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Yet it is just a game, an intangible thing made up of pixels that disappear when I turn off the computer. Well, no it isn't. It is YOU, it is ME. It is our good times, it is our triumphs. It is our feelings, our time, our energy. How really is that any different than my childhood memories of playing with my dog, my brother, my friends.

This game is just as real as any of my past. My past no longer exists, same as this game doesn't exist after I turn off the electricity. What exists is what we take from our past, what we take from this game. Me, I have a lot of people I can call friend because of this game.

Thats from the pardusdv.com
Sol Invictus
Sol Invictus Feb 7, 2009 at 11:35 pm
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I used to think that way to justify my playing WOW all the time. It's a very unhealthy way to think because it detaches you from reality and makes you even more absorbed into the transient "reality" of the MMO server. I say server because the reality of one server is different than that of the next.

After I'd developed discontent with the server I was playing on, I'd made a habit of rolling new characters on different servers and doing so allowed me to pull away from the game altogether because I realized how little it actually meant. There's nothing real about most 'friendships' you develop in an MMO. Most of these people aren't going to talk to you outside of the game because they're too immersed in that setting and treat it as something completely alternate to the rest of what little lives they have.

I've met quite a number of people within the Quake, Guild Wars (which isn't an MMO) and Diablo communities with whom I still interact to this day. I can't say the same about anyone I've ever played WOW or WAR with despite having probably spent many more hours with those people when I played those games.

As games, MMOs fail horribly because they require far too much investment of personal energy and effort to feel "rewarding". By which time you feel like you can't quit because of all you've invested in these products.
SamuraiJakkass86
SamuraiJakkass86 Feb 8, 2009 at 11:19 am
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I must report that since quitting the very fun/addicting MMO's such as World of Warcraft (where I have a lvl 80 Female Blood Elf DK, 70 Female Orc Enhancement Shammy) that I have had a lot more freetime to go out with my friends and do much more productive social activies.. like drinking!  I get to drink 2-3 times a night now that I'm not playing MMORPG's!

We all get together at one of the local pubs and just booze it up whilst complaining about work now :O!  I think I've woken up with 3 rather enjoyable hangovers in just the past week alone!  Hell I even sold my soul to god so that when I'm NOT drinking myself into a stupor I can easily just go to church and confess away all my sins:D!

Though I'm in the military too and since I'm stationed on the opposite side of the U.S. from my girlfriend and I've quit MMO's our recreational dating activity (a.k.a. WoW) our relationship has suffered signifigantly :\  Now we have to rely purely on cell phone calls asking about how each others days been (which is generally not a good thing since all I do is drink with friends now).

Boy oh boy where was I before I quit MMO's?  I think I was having fun.. doing something satisfying.. and loving it :(  God what was wrong with me back then?

Booze and breakups FTW!  THANKYOU SOCIAL LIFE!
David_belgae
David_belgae Feb 8, 2009 at 12:15 pm
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Woo.
I registered on this site, just to be able to comment. So far, I red about it, I heard about it... but nothing came so close to being so "blunt" about it.

I experienced some points you described, up to the point that I totally broke down. Not a depression, but something pretty close. So, I took it up my own to go see a docter. I'm not ashamed to admit that.

Now, i'm actually meeting people again, getting close to having a girlfriend and now I have a new hobby: photographing. (lol)
I loved to record the good moments in the game, and making a music video about it. So it was only a natural step to hang on to something similar creative to get myself out of it.

The so called friends I left behind? Only two of them still talk to me via email sometimes. When they aren't busy grinding for fame or a title.  And the memories? I wish I could have replaced them with memories of playing around on the beach with some girl and some other stuff.

The day you will lay in a hospital, for whatever reason... wonder what you will miss more? Friends and family by your side or the memories of a game no one really cares about ?

Thanks for the blog!!!

Cheers
David
Vanzen
Vanzen Feb 8, 2009 at 4:37 pm
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Completely agree. Thats why i froze my WOW account after 2 years.
The game felt more like working than gaming... and i really like to get paid when i work, not the other way around ;\
HELLFROG
HELLFROG Feb 8, 2009 at 5:41 pm
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here is my tried and true 4 step program to stop any behavior, and it applies to MMORPG addiction as well as smoking, nailbiting, bedwetting, etc.


STEP 1:
raise your hand above your head

STEP 2:
make a fist

STEP 3:
punch yourself in the balls

STEP 4:
repeat.

continue until whatever behavior you seek to diminish has actually extinguished

success every time!

now I realize this may be sexist as females cannot partake, and the answer is simply sex change procedure.

enjoy!


seriously ... it takes all kinds to get 'addicted' to the game...  not always the same kind of cat.

I have been playing D2 for ages and am athletic, can easily go out and do other stuff... the satisfaction is just in the game itself.  when those feelings of boredom set in i stop but always think of something that brings me back.

I try to get out... they pull me back in!
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