In South Korea, some politicians (certainly not all) seem to have it out for gaming. These politicians want video games in the same category as alcohol and even illegal drugs.
Last month, for example, Hwang Woo-yea of the majority conservative Saenuri party talked about rescuing āsociety from evil.ā ThisIsGame (via tipster Sang) quotes Hwang as saying:
According to the Ministry of Welfare, four major categories of addiction where medical treatment is needed are 2.18 million alcoholics, 0.47 million internet gamers, 0.59 million gamblers, and 0.09 million drug addicts. The sum of them accounts for 6.7 precent of the population which adds up to 3.33 million people. This country has to be be saved from the four major addictions. We have to understand the pain individuals and families of alcohol, drugs, gambling, and game addicts go through, heal them and provide them with a proper environment so we can save our society from these evils.
Hwang went on to call for strict regulations for game developers in South Korea. Obviously, the countryās game industry doesnāt seem too happy about this.
The addiction bill hasnāt passed, but the countryās conservative Saenuri party keeps pushing it. And since this is the majority party, things do not look good. The countryās leader, President Park Geun-hye, is in the Saenuri party.
And in South Korea, there is a āShutdown Lawā that has made life difficult for gamers.
This sort of talk isnāt new in South Korea. Earlier this spring, a bill was introduced by this same political party that said video games needed to be strictly regulated like drugs and alcohol. Last month, Hwang called for the passage of this bill.
Then, late last month, ETNews reported that South Koreaās Ministry of Health and Welfare even began trying to assign ādisease codesā for addictions like āinternetā and āgames.ā This, in turn, would classify them as mental disorders. And that could probably help the passage of this legislation.
In a country where gaming and eSports thrive, these politicians and bureaucrats seem out of step. Or maybe itās because gaming thrives that they want to regulate them more, presumably trying to take a cut. Whatever the rationale is, these politicians make Congressman Jun Byung-hun, who once cosplayed as a League of Legends character, that much of a closer ally for Korean gamers.
źµėƼ ėė¤ģź° ģ¦źø°ė ģøķ°ė·ź²ģģ ģ§ė³ ģ ė°ė¬¼ģ“ė¼ė [ETNews Thanks, Sang!]
ģė리ė¹, 4ė ģ¤ė ģ²ź²° ėģģ āź²ģāė ķ¬ķØ [ThisIsGame]
Photo: SeanPavonePhoto | Shutterstock
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