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Why taking video games to another level can lead to mental illness

An obsession with spending too much time in the virtual world can have serious consequences in real life, experts warn

Reading Time:6 minutes
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Education is needed on e-sports, academics say. Photo: Dickson Lee

“Life is so much easier in the virtual world,” says 18-year-old former video game addict, Thomas Chan.

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“I can make friends without having to deal with the awkwardness of face-to-face communications. I have so much more confidence from winning a game than in real life where everyone at school is so competitive.

“More importantly, the computer is always there for me.”

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Chan, who skipped school for 18 months to play video games when he was 16, is not alone in his video game obsession. But what many gamers do not realise is that they may also be putting their mental health at risk. So much so that the issue recently prompted the World Health Organisation to list gaming addiction as a mental health condition for the first time.

For some, virtual reality is better than the real world. Photo: Felix Wong
For some, virtual reality is better than the real world. Photo: Felix Wong

In Hong Kong, the high- ­pressure learning and working environment has driven both adults and children to the virtual world where, much like Chan, they can easily and quickly be entertained and also boost their self-esteem, experts say.

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