At 12 years-old Motoki Nishimura became a gaming recluse. At 17, he became an author, writing a book about his experience.
Earlier this year, Nishimura published My Online Gaming Devil, which details his descent into online gaming when his parents divorced. āI didnāt care what happened in real life,ā he told The Mainichi Daily News. āI didnāt think there was any point in livingā¦ā
The intense hours of gaming left him with a condition known as ataxia. It wasnāt until Nishimura was interviewed by another author about his online gaming addiction that he decided to change his life.
Donāt think of My Online Gaming Devil as a condemnation. āOnline gaming is not a bad thing, and there are many different types of gamers,ā he adds. Nishimura continues to game, but has branched out of his shell.
āWhen I stayed in and did nothing but play games, there was no chance to do the things I wanted to do. But now there are people drawing me into the real world. I am so grateful, I think itās an amazing thing.ā
In the Japanese media, ānetoge haijinā or āonline game invalidsā have become a popular topic of sorts.
As Kotaku previously posted, the slang ānetoge haijinā went mainstream in 2009 in part due to news reports like this. There was also a book by journalist Osamu Ashizaki cleverly called Netoge Haijin, published in May 2009. Hardly a Japan-only trend, the book explored the dangerous of online gaming.
https://lastchance.cc/japanese-news-online-game-addicts-pee-bottle-appears-5447071%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Online gaming addict takes the long road back to real life [Mainichi Daily News]