“These video games — gosh, they’ve gotten a lot more realistic over the years,” says Fox 26’s newscaster Ned Hibberd in the opening of a segment called Videogame Addiction on Houston’s Fox station.

In the segment, which can be found in their Videogames can be Explicit, Addictive story, they talk with neurotherapist Ron Swatzyna, who says that gamers’ “brains can not tell the difference between being in real combat and being in a game,” and continues to say that “the brain is going into a survival mode.”

Article image

This statement is followed by stock footage of fiery explosions while the newscaster likens this “survivial mode” to the posttraumatic stress disorder a soldier would get on the front lines of war.

Swatzyna also talks about videogame addiction, stating that he has “seen people who have stopped playing the game go into withdrawal-type symptoms – shakes and everything else.”

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

Finally, Ned Hibberd rounds the segment out by saying that “Parents who let their kids pour their youth into an online alterego might be creating a pixelated Peter Pan.”

You can watch this fine segment on MyFox Houston’s Web page.

BO7 key art

Tell me, Destructoid reader and avid gamer, how are you coping with your posttraumatic stress disorder and incessant shaking?

[Thanks, TT]

yordles animation still image

Destiny 2 Solstice 2025 armor

Hell is Us gameplay reveal

Black Ops 6 Season 5 Multiplayer Ransack Mode

Tekken Tag Tournament 2: a black and white Jin and Heihachi stand back-to-back.

PEAK Bing Bong plushie

GigabyteMon