Nearly Every Tween Engaged In Online Gaming

Tom Goldman

Crying on the inside.
Aug 17, 2009
14,499
0
0
Nearly Every Tween Engaged In Online Gaming



According to a nationwide survey, almost every child plays videogames online today.

New research has concluded there isn't just an increase in the amount of young kids playing online games these days, they're nearly all playing them. The results of a survey conducted by M2 Research [http://www.m2research.com/kids-and-games-report-release.htm] state that more than 90% of kids between 8-11 years old are getting online to game.

After surveying 5,000 children across the U.S., M2 found that online games "dominate" for both boys and girls 8-11 with 91% of boys and 93% of girls playing online. The kids mentioned Facebook as one of their favorite websites, so social networking games are probably a big part of their gaming habits as they don't have steady sources of income. Free-to-play titles like Club Penguin [http://www.clubpenguin.com/] designed for kids are also likely draws for these tweens, and also the reason for many a crying fit when parents deny their children's requests to buy them coins.

A specific game mentioned in the survey was Call of Duty: Modern Warfare [http://www.amazon.com/Call-Duty-Modern-Warfare-Xbox-360/dp/B00269QLI8/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=videogames&qid=1282411860&sr=8-1] which 36% of male respondents picked as their favorite game. I'm not sure how great it is for teens to grow up playing Modern Warfare in an open online environment, so hopefully parents are really making good use of parental controls. 20% of girls mentioned Mario as their favorite series, a safe offline game where nobody can scream racial epithets at them.

There was no big standout that seemed to be able to keep kids' attention for long periods of time, however. M2 Research Analyst Louise Curcio says: "We have found kids tend to play a wide variety of games, and their favorite games and gaming sites change often. There are opportunities for companies, and we believe the kids market has been overlooked."

To me, the results of this survey notate a huge shift for gaming in society. When I was 8-11, if you weren't lucky enough to have your parents buy you a Super Nintendo or Genesis you were stuck with crossword puzzles and playing in the street because PCs were a little more complicated then. Now, kids have a nearly infinite number of free games to play through the PC, and some of those even allow interaction with other kids in an online world. Thanks to social networking and free-to-play games, we've finally hit that point where it'd be a challenge for a kid to grow up without exposure to a videogame of some sort. When I'm old and gray, it'll make me feel better that the people running the country grew up playing FarmVille.

Source: GI.biz [http://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2010-08-20-over-90-percent-of-8-11-year-olds-play-online-games]

Permalink
 

ultimateownage

This name was cool in 2008.
Feb 11, 2009
5,346
0
41
If someone says "Tween." one more fucking time I think I'll murder somebody.

O.T. Oh shit, that means I have a chance of running into 91% and 93% of the two most annoying things in the world respectably.
 

TheRightToArmBears

New member
Dec 13, 2008
8,674
0
0
You know what this means?

If all else fails, in about 20 years gaming will be completely accepted as mainstream.

And stop saying tween. It reminds me of these:
 

Jack and Calumon

Digimon are cool.
Dec 29, 2008
4,190
0
41
So THAT'S who who has the name Bob in Club Penguin! Why I oughta...

OT: With Facebook games and the internet being rather common place. My surprised face has yet to be seen today.

Calumon: Modern Warfare... Why can't people play better things? Like Monopoly?
 

mad825

New member
Mar 28, 2010
3,379
0
0
zombie711 said:
Whats a tween? it sounds like a wierd bird or some horrible disease.
if i'm not mistaken, its a hobbit between the ages of 20 and 32.
 

William Dickbringer

New member
Feb 16, 2010
1,426
0
0
ultimateownage said:
If someone says "Tween." one more fucking time I think I'll murder somebody.

O.T. Oh shit, that means I have a chance of running into 91% and 93% of the two most annoying things in the world respectably.
tween I'M SORRY DON"T KILL ME
O.T. so really more girls in that age group play games than boys WHAT BLASPHEMY IS THIS
(not meant to be sexist)
 

latenightapplepie

New member
Nov 9, 2008
3,086
0
0
Wow. This figures seem accurate to me, I guess I just never thought about it before. Here's hoping there can be some genuinely good games for this 'tween' market, and not just shitty titles featuring the Jonas Brothers.

Oh wait, too late [http://www.disneydreaming.com/2009/05/29/jonas-game-for-nintendo-ds/].
 

Eggsnham

New member
Apr 29, 2009
4,054
0
0
What's with "tween" there is no such thing as "tween".

There's:

Newborn.

Infant.

Toddler.

Child.

Teen.

Adolescent.

Adult.

Senior.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Where does "tween" fit in there?

/rant


OT: Couldn't care less as long as they're not being obnoxious on the games that I'm playing.
 

therookie95

New member
Nov 18, 2009
84
0
0
Well, when the kids become teens the numbers probley go up to 99.9% But honestly, i'm more annoyed that kids grow up playing COD rather then TF2 but that's just me. Hopefully, we soon won't need to worry about people saying "Games are horrible for our kids!" When everyone has wound up playing them when they were kids.
 

Alandoril

New member
Jul 19, 2010
532
0
0
Eggsnham said:
What's with "tween" there is no such thing as "tween".

There's:

Newborn.

Infant.

Toddler.

Child.

Teen.

Adolescent.

Adult.

Senior.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Where does "tween" fit in there?

/rant


OT: Couldn't care less as long as they're not being obnoxious on the games that I'm playing.
Between child and teen.
 

selce

New member
Nov 27, 2007
182
0
0
Tom Goldman said:
When I'm old and gray, it'll make me feel better that the people running the country grew up playing FarmVille.>
now that is truly scary
 

Iron Mal

New member
Jun 4, 2008
2,749
0
0
TheRightToArmBears said:
You know what this means?

If all else fails, in about 20 years gaming will be completely accepted as mainstream.
Exactly what I was thinking, some of us may be skeptical about the wave of casual gamers and casual games like Farmville etc. but we do have to admit that it does have one major benefit, it helps ease gaming into the mainstream and helps make it acceptable in the eyes of the 'moral guardians'.

There are those out there who look down upon casual gamers and don't see them as 'real gamers' but it should be noted that this kind of outlook will actually do more harm to our medium and culture than 'preserve' anything.

If I remember right (correct me if I'm wrong) but this is exactly what happened to DnD (it was once socially acceptable and normal but now it's seen as the past-time of people with no social skills and an overactive imagination), the 'hardcore' fans started viewing it as 'their thing' which in turn slowly drove people out and gave them the negetive stereotype they have today.
 

Firoth

New member
Jul 14, 2010
522
0
0
Huh, I always thought "tween" was a cross for "Twilight" and "teen" (a teenage Twilight fan). Just goes to show how much attention I pay to things that don't interest me.
 

Digicoolking

New member
Jan 11, 2010
11
0
0
Only 5000? I doubt this is an acurrate representation, plus it doesn't say how they distributed the question/quiz. I'm sure there are plenty more teens out there than just 5000, although I'm sure online games are popular among kids, but I suspect some kids just said yes because they play for 5 mins a day or something small like that. anyway I'm going to take this with a pinch of salt.