5 Reasons It Actually Rocks Being A Gamer With Kids
Photo by Pablo Blazquez Dominguez / Getty Images
Kids: the ultimate time-suck. The world’s most immersive RPG, they require an 18 year subscription and huge monthly membership fees. For most people who like to keep up on all the latest games and hardware, having children sounds like the best way to effectively kill a videogame hobby. Kids and games both require time, energy and expendable resources, and it’s hard finding enough of all three to handle either games or kids alone, much less both at once.
But in that cloud lies a silver lining. Five, in fact. Having kids and being a gamer is actually way better than you think. Here’s why.
5. You have a built in audience/second player.
Everyone loves an audience, especially one young enough to not understand how bad you are at videogames. That’s where your kid (or your niece, or nephew, or your little cousin…try this on any kid in your life!) comes in. Kids are bored, easily distracted by bright colors and moving shapes, and they have no concept of time. They can easily spend 10 hours on a couch watching you suck at Mega Man 10 and be completely entertained.
They’re also really good at holding the controller and sucking even more at a videogame than you do, so if you needed some easy wins in Street Fighter V, you now have options. My dad used to make me play John Madden ‘94 just for the satisfaction of beating me 108-7. I didn’t even know what a football was but he was still very proud of this accomplishment.
Now, as any parent, aunt, uncle, or particularly cool grandparent will tell you, this trick works less and less as the adolescent child in your life grows older. At a certain point, a kid is going to figure out that it’s much more fun to play a game than watch one. But as Twitch and YouTube Let’s Plays firmly taken the reins from TV as many kids’ primary form of entertainment, there’s room for a rebound. Folks can make a lot of money streaming videogames and it’s not just because they make it fun to watch, but because people do in fact want to watch. So when you pick up that controller, tell your kid that you’re giving a live Twitch performance. They’ll settle in for the next six hours.
4. They’re a shield for the kid games you secretly long to play.
You’re in videogame store (ok it’s Gamestop, there’s only Gamestop, Gamestop is the only videogame store that exists) picking up the new Pokémon game, trying not to look like a child in front of the cashier when your daughter or nephew runs up behind you. “Oh is this for them?” The clerk asks casually and you feign a chuckle. “Yeah, I thought I’d get ‘em started early.” you say as you stuff the case in the front pocket of your overcoat like a gentleman spy.
Of course, once you get home, you’re actually going to cash in every last ounce of parental goodwill to hog the 3DS until they forget Pokémon even exists (“Mommy’s going to go wrap Christmas presents in her room… in July…for the next ten hours!”), but the cashier doesn’t have to know that. Nobody does. It doesn’t matter if it’s murder or Monster Hunter, children are the perfect cover.
3. Kids are a great gofer.
One of my earliest memories is of the original Legend of Zelda on NES. That is, my babysitter and The Legend of Zelda. I was 4 and far too young to get a chance at the amazing adventure game myself, but she was still generous enough to let me sit on the couch as she played.