I'd personally suggest a few things, as a WOW gamer myself.
Firstly, maybe try to sit down and ask him what draws him to spend so much time there, maybe get him to show you how it's played for a while, the more you understand something, the less it will seem threatening, I'm sure. I'd also say the limited time is a very sensible path, rather than an outright ban, as from him perspective, it will come across as 'all these people you like to talk to, I'm saying you can't see any of them!', not just 'you can't play one game'. Perhaps agreeing a 2 hour window in the evening, subject to behaviour would be a good place to start.
As a guild leader myself, I understand real life comes first, and I've supported the parents when kids have told me 'dammit my dad says I've gotta get off the computer' with a general 'his rules mate, we'll still be here tomorrow!' Hwoever a sudden 'cut off' with no warning could mean that he's let down groups of people he considers friends when they all show up for an event and wait for him, and he knows he can't get on to see them.
I'm not saying at all that you shouldn't cut him off, but just trying to show that maybe it's not just a freakout that he can't play, but maybe that he's letting people down and it's out of his control.
Just from my viewpoint, a vast amount of why people end up playing games like WOW so much is the social aspect, you're a part of a large society, and with guilds and the like, you're regularly greeted just for logging in, etc.
Teenage life can be very rough, and maybe a virtual world where he's accepted isn't worse than none. I'm not saying he shouldn't be out in the real world making real friends, but I do think there's value in learning how to be a popular player in WOW, in terms of simple honesty, fairness, politeness, etc.
Pleasae don't take my words as criticism, I'm fully in favour of what you're doing, you need to look after your son, and if he's throwing tantrums etc, well, lets just say we've got a few people in my guild who can only play a few hours a week, and they don't complain, they just get on with enjoying the game when they can and get back to real life after.
I'd suggest a 7-9 maybe, after dinner and homework. Nowadays gaming is what TV was to kids 20 years ago, and at least they're using their brains, not just staring at flashing colours.
The above poster has a point however, even a short simple dungeon crawl with 4 other people can take an hour or more, that's if you find the right 4 people immediately, which is why I suggest a 2 hour slot, he can probably achieve something he wants to do without feeling he's being 'switched off' halfway thru something. To be honest, most people would be kind of pissed if you sneaked in and switched off the projectors 10 minutes before the end of the movie at a cinema.
Firstly, maybe try to sit down and ask him what draws him to spend so much time there, maybe get him to show you how it's played for a while, the more you understand something, the less it will seem threatening, I'm sure. I'd also say the limited time is a very sensible path, rather than an outright ban, as from him perspective, it will come across as 'all these people you like to talk to, I'm saying you can't see any of them!', not just 'you can't play one game'. Perhaps agreeing a 2 hour window in the evening, subject to behaviour would be a good place to start.
As a guild leader myself, I understand real life comes first, and I've supported the parents when kids have told me 'dammit my dad says I've gotta get off the computer' with a general 'his rules mate, we'll still be here tomorrow!' Hwoever a sudden 'cut off' with no warning could mean that he's let down groups of people he considers friends when they all show up for an event and wait for him, and he knows he can't get on to see them.
I'm not saying at all that you shouldn't cut him off, but just trying to show that maybe it's not just a freakout that he can't play, but maybe that he's letting people down and it's out of his control.
Just from my viewpoint, a vast amount of why people end up playing games like WOW so much is the social aspect, you're a part of a large society, and with guilds and the like, you're regularly greeted just for logging in, etc.
Teenage life can be very rough, and maybe a virtual world where he's accepted isn't worse than none. I'm not saying he shouldn't be out in the real world making real friends, but I do think there's value in learning how to be a popular player in WOW, in terms of simple honesty, fairness, politeness, etc.
Pleasae don't take my words as criticism, I'm fully in favour of what you're doing, you need to look after your son, and if he's throwing tantrums etc, well, lets just say we've got a few people in my guild who can only play a few hours a week, and they don't complain, they just get on with enjoying the game when they can and get back to real life after.
I'd suggest a 7-9 maybe, after dinner and homework. Nowadays gaming is what TV was to kids 20 years ago, and at least they're using their brains, not just staring at flashing colours.
The above poster has a point however, even a short simple dungeon crawl with 4 other people can take an hour or more, that's if you find the right 4 people immediately, which is why I suggest a 2 hour slot, he can probably achieve something he wants to do without feeling he's being 'switched off' halfway thru something. To be honest, most people would be kind of pissed if you sneaked in and switched off the projectors 10 minutes before the end of the movie at a cinema.