Chinese Gamer Dies in the Matrix and for Real

Phil Butler,

China cyber cafeThere is so little positive news from China these days and this is particularly true with regard to Web news. Censorship, hacking, prostitution issues and a host of other maladies seem to be plaguing China and its Internet. Just today it was reported that a man dropped dead in a Chinese cyber café after playing some online game for three days straight. According to the news a 30 year old man evidently died of exhaustion, but the particular game was not mentioned. I feel terrible for the man but it is difficult not to have a rather tongue in cheek visualization of Web 2.0 turning deadly.

Is Web 2.0 a Drug?

If I had to bet money on Web activities bordering on being purely addictive I would say categorically that most of the people I know are habitual offenders. Just last night a great friend and I were plotting the strategy for galvanizing Web 2.0 into some monumental tool for good when at length we both typed in total exhaustion and almost in unison: “I am bored, we need something new!” When I played online games a couple of years back it was not uncommon for a group of friends to interface for hours if not days on end either in game or in collaboration. Even now an article often keeps me awake past 3 AM after a day of research and sometimes as many as 4 IM sessions taking place simultaneously. Believe me, this is not outside the norm for any of the A list bloggers either.

Where is the Easy Button?

The thing about the Web - particularly Web 2.0 that is so compelling is the potential. I am not talking about just the potential to make money (which is enormous) but also about the potential to do good, make the world a better place or even to meet a lifelong friend. The speed and access this medium gives us all is beyond any communication tool ever devised. Any day one simply has to expect that something fantastic might come across their Web presence. People are wired into something here that we seldom even think about in that their lives can be changed significantly from one day to the next. The order of significance may be localized to particular venues but never the less nothing can act in the same way the Web does. This is both fantastic and dangerous as this news reflects. Web 2.0 is a big red easy button that we all wait to light up.

A World Within a World

The cool reality of our dual existence is that Web 2.0 is a separate reality that can affect our more concrete one. I can truthfully say that not one of my hometown relatively unwired friends sees any significance in being able to type: “Phil Butler blogger” into Google and getting 10 hits for this writer. Both here and in the physical world this narrow a search really means little in reality. However, in the the world we have built here it is fascinating. Such things symbolize presence and a small fragment of evidence that we are here. This is the blessing and the curse of the Internet, the dichotomy of dynamic that represents fantastic possibility and also massive wasted energy. For this poor Chinese man some potentiality ended rather needlessly. It is interesting how Web 2.0 and the Matrix seem so paralleled in that if you die on Web 2.0 - you also die for real. Perhaps we should all think a little more about what we need next from this medium.

Image Courtesy Yahoo! News

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  • 11 months 1 week ago

    I’d like to Give that Game to George W. Bush for Christmas this year!!

    ;))

    Or maybe even Sooner for Halloween!!

  • 11 months 1 week ago

    The guy who died from gaming is old news. On the radio today I heard a story out of Bosnia about a couple getting divorced because they found out they were having an “IM affair” and did not know who they were talking to until they met up. I call BS as this is nothing more than repacking the Pina Colada song.

    A lot of the “tall tales” we hear out of china and Eastern Europe are just made up.

  • No Gravatar
    Phil Butler,
    11 months 1 week ago

    LOL @ Billy :) Steve, you missed the capitalization of China man. Do yo want us to be hacked by armies or Chinese soldiers? We have reached a point where much of the news is questionable not just that out of China. I know I almost died while playing Counterstrike once because a buddy made me laugh so hard I choked on a pork chop. :)

  • No Gravatar
    Svetlana Gladkova,
    11 months 1 week ago

    Phil, excellent article, you made me realize how actually strange some of our common values (like being easily found by Google as a blogger and writer) are for the rest of the mankind :)

    By the way, only yesterday we had equally strange and terrible news here in Russia: a teenager killed a friend of his after the friend stole some of his virtual property in an online game that is popular here. This looks like even more dangerous - gamers are dangerous to other people, not only to themselves.

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