While critics of videogames would have you believe that they are efficient little murder simulations, an NPR editorial from Benjamin Busch begs to differ. Who is Benjamin Busch and why does his opinion carry more weight than most? Because he is an United States Marine Corps infantry officer who has served in Iraq on two combat tours.
Busch talks about the war games of youth - playing war in Brooklyn where kids played Allied forces and Germans and controlling the flow of war in a sandbox filled with army men. While the medium has changed since those days, the way war is played has not.
Busch points out that the reason that video games can never be like real-life war is that they do not usually contain elements that are unfair like real-life "invisible snipers" that pick off your friends. Here is a portion of what he says about that: [URL=http://www.gamepolitics.com/2010/10/11/why-videogames-are-not-real-war][B][COLOR=#8e0505]Read More[/COLOR][/B][/URL]
[URL=http://www.gamepolitics.com/2010/10/11/why-videogames-are-not-real-war]read more[/URL]
[url=http://www.gamepolitics.com/2010/10/11/why-videogames-are-not-real-war]More...[/url]