Why Game?

Grimstaff

Explorer
I was reading some articles from the 30th Anniversary of D&D and a particular statistic got me thinking: the median age of the average gamer is 35. With a career, spouse and kids, no less. So, why game? Life is busy, and complicated. Is gaming just an escape, a distraction from everyday life?

Or is it something deeper, perhaps an attempt to recapture some elusive childhood magic?
A rare creative outlet in an increasingly pragmatic world?
Just plain fun?

Just curious...
 

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I don't know about other people, but here's mine:

I'm currently working 20 hrs per week on a literary magazine and working on my second preliminary exam for my Ph.D., which involves reading well over 100 books. But I still make time to run two weekly campaigns and have just joined a bi-weekly one as a player. Why? Because D&D is my primary creative outlet. Because gaming is fun. Because I love the feeling of my brain buzzing, and D&D is a very easy way to do that all the time, since when I don't have my brain buzzing about something else, I can always exercise it on the subject of my campaigns, a PC, a plot point, a mechanical issue, etc.
 


No matter how complicated my life becomes, I'd like to think that I will always enjoy playing the game as a game, and exploring the lives of the characters I create with my friends.
 


There are several reasons why I make time to play despite the rigors of life. First and foremost its fun! But in addition to that its a moment to draw my mind away from things going on at work or elsewhere. Whether it be in game prep, thinking about a character or at the game session itself. It is a time where I don't have to think about anything but the game at hand. I also like that it helps open my mind a little and read about different things and think about different things. I am a computer geek by trade, so I spend a lot of time on techie sites, reading docs and bettering myself at my job. Gaming is a chance to still use my head but in an area I might not otherwise. So gaming for me serves a variety of purposes, but in the end it comes down to I have fun playing.
 

I game for the same reasons people watch Bold and the Beautiful or Toy Story, or play Quake.

The difference is that I'll tolerate the complexity of a maths-based system and the rigours of imagination in order to enjoy a deeper level of interaction with the story.
 


I Have to

I'm a writer, an illustrator and a fan of SF, Fantasy, Comics, etc. I need an outlet for my ideas, drawings and stories. If I didn't GM, I think my head would explode! :eek:

NewLifeForm
 


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