Author Topic: What were your family videogaming rules?  (Read 1480 times)

TDIRunner

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Re: What were your family videogaming rules?
« Reply #30 on: September 25, 2017, 03:46:38 AM »
The only rule we had was with the original NES which was no games on school nights.  My parents  enforced that rule to the point of packing the NES back into its original box during the week and we got it back out on Friday after school.
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SignOfZeta

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Re: What were your family videogaming rules?
« Reply #31 on: September 25, 2017, 12:58:26 PM »
None. I mainly played in arcades so as long as I could supply the quarters I was good. We had 2600, Coleco, and various computers at home over the years but I didn't get mad into consoles until I was old enough to buy them myself.

I had no time restrictions but then when all you have is 2600 you end up watching a lot of MTV anyway...

Nowadays kids do f*cktons of homework from very early ages and games seem like they are designed to consume as much of their lives as possible...it's crazy. No wonder so many are neurotic fatsos.
« Last Edit: September 25, 2017, 01:00:35 PM by SignOfZeta »

SuperGrafx

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Re: What were your family videogaming rules?
« Reply #32 on: September 25, 2017, 02:04:44 PM »
The only rule we had was with the original NES which was no games on school nights.  My parents  enforced that rule to the point of packing the NES back into its original box during the week and we got it back out on Friday after school.

Sounds like how things went in my household.
Gaming privileges were golden...as long as you behaved and did well in school, we were allowed to play the NES on weekends and occasionally during the week.

nopepper

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Re: What were your family videogaming rules?
« Reply #33 on: September 27, 2017, 10:09:33 AM »
Only rule I can think of during our Intellivision days was our parents got to play as long as they wanted first and when they were ready for a break, I got a shot. My Brother played less because he was pretty young during most of that period and the 8-bit gen was his equivalent. My parents weren't interested in video games after Intellivision.

Holy shit, my story is eerily similar, except I was the younger brother (but I played more than my older brother, which means you are not my brother).

My parents were absolutely hooked on Burger Time and Lock n Chase, which they bought for $1 each at, I believe, Kmart, during the great video game crash. I remember my dad had a shopping cart almost filled to the top with Intellivision games, a new console (to replace the old one with the shot controllers) and the Intellivoice ("Mattel Electronics presents - SPACE SPARTANS!!").

Once we got older, there were no real restrictions for the Master System and later, Genesis. We all had really good grades, did a lot of extra curricular activities, active in sports, etc., so there was no need for rules.

Arkhan

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Re: What were your family videogaming rules?
« Reply #34 on: September 30, 2017, 07:08:29 AM »
My parents didn't care since I got good grades and didn't run around smoking crack and breaking stuff.

The only real rules were things like:

1) pause the damn game and go to school
2) pause the damn game and take out the trash (or rake leaves, shovel snow, etc.)
3) pause the damn game we're going to grandmas (bring your gameboy)

I left the consoles running and paused a lot.   They understood this after I explained how RPGs don't let you save anywhere and it would be stupid to turn it off and have to play stuff again.

Sometimes they would tell me like "hey why don't you go outside for a little bit" when it was nice out.   

Sometimes I'd do that on my own.

They didn't really care either way.

They always told me that if my grades sucked or I was in trouble a lot, things would change.    But, I never had that happen.   Occasionally I'd get grounded and they'd take the controllers away.

They realized that wasn't really that useful of a punishment, though.   Smacking me and turning off my AOL screenname was better.

[Fri 19:34]<nectarsis> been wanting to try that one for awhile now Ope
[Fri 19:33]<Opethian> l;ol huge dong

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