I was talking with a coworker about what games my parents allow me to play, and what they let their kids play. My parents were fine with most things bloody things, like Resident Evil 4, Left 4 Dead and Gears of War, mostly because you were fighting like aliens or zombies. They were fine with military shooters too, and got really interested in the Modern Warfare storylines. The game that they really had a problem with was GTA, of course, but later, when my little sister started playing it, they got invested in GTA 5’s story, so eventually we could just play whatever we really wanted. How bout you all? Did your parents have any weird or strict rules in games or movies?

  • The Book Elf
    link
    fedilink
    9
    edit-2
    10 days ago

    My parents let me play whatever I wanted, even Mortal Kombat and Resident Evil, but first they taught me the difference between fiction and reality and said I could play for a limited amount of hours per day, and only after doing my homework or after studying. Except on weekends, on weekends they let me play for longer, but also made sure I was playing offline too and going outside. It was pretty good.

    The funny thing to me is that my dad would sometimes say it frustrated him that I liked video games because he thought they were “for boys” and yet he was the one who bought my (jailbroken) console and (pirated physical copies of) games until I turned 18 lol

  • DUMBASS
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1510 days ago

    We don’t buy games in this house, we pirate them.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      310 days ago

      One day they will figure out why they can’t connect the Nintendo Switch to the internet and why they have so many game options.

    • The Book Elf
      link
      fedilink
      2
      edit-2
      10 days ago

      We did too, but it was because my parents refused to pay full price for a game, so they bought pirate physical copies for dirt cheap and they worked great. Then of course I learned to torrent. Nowadays I only buy games when they’re from indie devs or from small companies.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    2610 days ago

    None, before my mom saw me play Soldier of Fortune and shoot a dudes’ ball off. After that she bought me an “educational, age appropriate game”, The Logical Journey of the Zoombini. I wasn’t supposed to play violent games, and instead play this game I was supposed to get bored of because it’s educational, and go play outside.

    Jokes on her, I loved that game, and played it a ton.

    Of course I ignored the rule of violent games and just learned to alt+tab as a reflex if I heard someone open my door. Useful skill in other parts of life as well…

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    910 days ago

    None. My folks didn’t have any rules about games. Then again my parents really didn’t do rules.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      610 days ago

      My parents only had a few important ones, like don’t touch the guns, (they kept them out of reach usually.) And don’t mess with the cattle or play in the road.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1210 days ago

    I remember my mother briefly being resistant to getting me a violent game at some point. She was not that motivated to moderate what games I bought though. And eventually she didn’t seem to mind anything I was playing.

    In my opinon; if you let your kids watch rambo, you better allow them to play rambo.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1410 days ago

    They tried, but I don’t think they did a great job.

    I was limited by time and duration. I wasn’t allowed to start playing games until like 3pm, and wasn’t allowed to play after dinner. (If I went to someone else’s house, the rule didn’t apply. If someone came to my place, video games were also allowed, but my parents didn’t like people coming over). I also had to finish all my homework first. I remember just watching the clock on the weekends waiting for it to tick over to 3pm, then dashing up the stairs to the games.

    For some reason, I was allowed to watch as my TV as I wanted. I’m old and tv was limited, and we didn’t have all the channels.

    What ended up happening is I would lie. I would say I had finished my homework when I hadn’t to get that sweet, limited video game time. I would say I was watching TV in the basement but I was playing games with the sound down.

    This trashed my school habits. I was doing all my homework the morning it was due. I was a smart kid so everything was still getting done well enough for me to get B’s, but this wasn’t great. When I got to college I had no study habits or learning stamina.

    To this day I kind of find tv and other passive watching unsatisfying. I never watch anything on my own. Only with someone else.

    I don’t know what would have worked better. The clock based limit felt terrible though. Really hated that. Maybe if they had explained “if you put all your stat points in video games now, when skill ups are cheap, you’re going to be underpowered later” it would have landed.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      410 days ago

      RELATABLE, I destroyed my study habits for the same reason, though, I’m much better at studying now.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1010 days ago

    I made a PowerPoint presentation to convince them to let me play monster hunter when I was 13.

    They let me.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    410 days ago

    I am the parent, I make the rules.

    Play good stuff. Mostly not simple addiction trigger games.

    Growing up I had no limit since my parents although caring didn’t follow the game development as I did.

    • Flax
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 days ago

      Based.

      I’d probably get my children a 3ds or something. Plenty of good quality games on there

  • PonyOfWar
    link
    fedilink
    5
    edit-2
    10 days ago

    My parents were pretty opposed to violent media. As a younger child, I wasn’t really allowed to play anything that had explicit violence. Once instance I remember is when I was about 8 and we got a new PC that came bundled with Age of Empires 2. I was initially allowed to play it, but my dad took the CD away when he saw how much warfare it involved. Generally, they usually kept to the official age recommendations on the boxes. They relaxed their rules significantly from when I was around 12 though. That was also when I got my own PC and a Steam Account and they didn’t really check what I bought on there. Even got my mom to buy me GTA San Andreas (which has a 16+ recommendation here) when I was around 14. They never really approved necessarily, especially my dad, but they let me make my own decisions when they felt I was old enough.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    410 days ago

    None, really. I’d play Mortal Kombat with my much older sibling as a child and also grew up playing games like Diablo and GTA (the old ones). I really liked Carmageddon and Postal, too. TBH what I enjoyed the most about GTA was stealing cars and driving around in them. XD Or blocking traffic with a bunch of cars.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      110 days ago

      Yeah my sister liked the cars and story in GTA, she never really went in killing sprees whenever she did play it, cuz driving around and falling off buildings was more fun for her.

      I personally never really liked GTA, except GTA4 because of the physics and story.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    210 days ago

    I don’t remember my parents having many, if any, rules for games, probably because I was the final child by that point. They didn’t really have to worry too much about me getting into games too mature for me ( probably the worst I could remember when I was still little would have been Turok on n64 ), so I was fine either way.

    I do remember on weekends, though, my dad specifically trying to get me, someone who doesn’t like to eat breakfast in general, to eat before I’d play games. That was around middle school when that would happen.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    210 days ago

    Only one hour a day initially. And my mom hated any games with guns, so no games with guns. Creating an absolute bloodbath in Age of Empires was completely okidoki tho. At some point I wanted to buy GTA 3. My mom obviously said no (and fairly so, I was like 12 or something). But my dad, in an absolute chad move, said “oh I know that game, it’s fine”. I tended to play at the houses of friends who had less strict rules. I remember playing GTA Vice City on the original Xbox some time before I was allowed to buy GTA myself.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    410 days ago

    Not exactly rules on content (though they were in charge of buying me games until I was old enough that it no longer mattered, so they stuck to family friendly games for the most part.)

    However they initially refused to buy me another console other than the NES that I was gifted when I was very little. Some years later, my older brother took pity on me and got me a Genesis (they did not appreciate it.) The only other time I was bought a console was my mom got me a Nintendo 64 as a pity gift for a lot of terrible things that happened to me that year.

    I remember them saying they didn’t want to have to buy another console every year, with new games, etc. In hindsight, they were definitely predicting the future market haha.