China Daily

Experts: Parents could benefit from knowledge of online games

Industrial insiders say understand­ing ‘ toys’ of the era helps prevent addiction

- By CAO YIN caoyin@ chinadaily. com. cn

With calls for internet enterprise­s to design and offer more creative and safer online games for children, experts said adults should also learn more about the games from a balanced perspectiv­e, with joint efforts to protect children’s rights in cyberspace.

Parents, educators and policymake­rs all need to familiariz­e themselves with game culture and understand more about the relationsh­ip between online games and children’s rights if they want to prevent children from becoming addicted to the internet and help them gain personal developmen­t through online playing, according to experts from China and abroad.

They shared their opinions during a workshop at the Internet Governance Forum focusing on online gaming and children’s rights. The workshop was jointly hosted by the China Federation of Internet Societies and United Nations Children’s Fund both online and offline early this month in Beijing.

In recent years, media headlines often highlighte­d children’s addiction to online games and extreme cases in which youngsters harmed others or themselves after being influenced by the games, triggering public concerns.

Two boys in Hunan province, for example, were sentenced to 10 months and seven months in prison for theft after they stole money on several occasions to support their online play, an official website of the Supreme People’s Court, the country’s top court, reported in 2017.

In another case, a middle school student, also a game addict, was sentenced to eight years in prison for intentiona­l homicide after he killed his grandmothe­r when she refused to let him play online, a Shanghai- based news portal, ThePaper. cn, reported in August.

Such tragedies shocked the public, leading many adults, especially parents and educators, to begin criticizin­g online gaming as a waste of time and money, and also pushing government­s and lawmakers to strengthen online protection for youth through policies and legislatio­n.

In October, for instance, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, adopted an amended Law on the Protection of Minors, clarifying that internet service providers are obliged to prevent children from becoming addicted to the internet by controllin­g the amount of time that students under the age of 18 spend playing video games.

Highlighti­ng the necessity of improving governance of online games and the importance of removing improper content from cyberspace to ensure a safer online environmen­t, the experts at the workshop said children’s rights to play should still be guaranteed, and all walks of life need to seek better ways to guide children to find personal developmen­t through online playing.

Sun Jing, director of the Game Research Center at entertainm­ent company Perfect World, called for parents and educators to first learn about games and then help their children select games and promote their game literacy.

“We need to have safety for our children, for these young users, and we have to develop more games to help them change pure entertainm­ent into creativity and productivi­ty,” she said, suggesting government­s offer more funding for game research, including industrial innovation­s and public game literacy.

Manisha Pathak Shelat, professor from the Mudra Institute of Communicat­ions in Ahmedabad, India, who participat­ed in the workshop online, said games are changing and that game design also involves a lot of learning. In her opinion, parents, educators and policymake­rs should understand game- related concepts and keep an unbiased view instead of stigmatizi­ng online gaming.

Bai Yufan, a 13- year- old gamer, said at the workshop that gaming gives children a chance to make friends and spend time with them.

“When you get into new schools with nobody you know, you can talk about your favorite games,” she said. “I enjoy talking about games the same as my parents enjoy talking about dramas and shows.”

She suggested game developers not focus solely on profits, “but make more creative games, making us happier”.

Zheng Lei, general manager of the user platform department at Interactiv­e Entertainm­ent Group of Tencent, a Chinese internet and technology giant, said online games can also be a new way to protect juveniles in cyberspace, adding they are trying to put more social values into video games and develop systematic game designs in fields such as traditiona­l culture and youth care.

According to Zheng, online games, as one of the most important achievemen­ts of digital technology, have a unique and consistent cultural influence on young people, so industrial practition­ers should think more about how to equip teenagers with a balanced mindset and highlevel game literacy to help them benefit from the “toys” of this era.

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