A couple of things:
Playing computer games regularly and doing no other activities meant the chances of going to university fell from 24 per cent to 19 per cent for boys and from 20 per cent to 14 per cent for girls."
However, he added that times had changed in computer gaming: "The main thing I would highlight, because this is the 1970 cohort, when they played video games in 1986, that's not very many people. And the state of video games in 1986 is nothing like it is now."
Doesn't seem much to worry about - most gamers do more than just play games so I'm guessing that we're still just as likely to go to Uni, just seems to be relevant to the obsessives.Playing computer games frequently did not reduce the likelihood that a 16-year-old would be in a professional or managerial job at 33, the research finds.