WoW in particular, I would suggest, due to certain design choices, limits the imagination rather than expanding it. It's an amazing game, with amazing art design, but I do not think it's design is inspiring, or even immersive in the normal sense, but rather it's enveloping.
To even
suggest that people who play
World of Warcraft are somehow
depleted of some quantitative unit of imaginative faculty, as Mercurius does here:
But I don't think it is a stretch to conjecture that the imaginative faculties of someone before hours and hours of play are greater than after, if only subtly. Long-term play is more of a concern, and can be highly detrimental to one's imagination.
. . . is completely and utterly stupid. Mind-meltingly so.
Is Mercurius a neuroscientist? Has he identified the regions of the brain that make "imagination" function, and shown through peer-reviewed research that
World of Warcraft is detrimental to these parts of the brain?
"Long-term play . . . can be highly detrimental to one's imagination" is a
baseless statement, made with
no backing whatsoever.
Mercurius spent the rest of his post
asserting his conclusion (that
D&D is a more imagination-encouraging game than
World of Warcraft). He doesn't
support these statements - he simply says them, as if they were fact, and expects you to agree and follow his conclusion simply because he said it.
He then claims that he's
not saying what he
actually is:
Now I am not saying that any amount of World of Warcraft (or TV) will harm one's imagination.
This quote
makes no sense in the context of his statement earlier that the "imaginative faculty" of
WoW players is lessened, especially over the long term. Either Mercurius doesn't know what he wants to say, or he's lying here to cover his butt.
Mercurius uses weasel wording - "I don't think it's a stretch to conjecture" - after admitting that he can't actually
prove his conjecture. He then, however, goes on to make the rest of his post assuming that his conjecture is true, and drawing vast and damning conclusions about the negative effects of
WoW on something he considers to be of "such importance to the quality of human existence".
It's a pile of crap as tall as the Empire State Building, and not even one-millionth as well-constructed.