Originally posted by: CyTGdotNet
good stuff coming in ..
well the psp idea was spawned by her mother, indeed two of her playmates have gotten psp's .. how much they use them i dont know..
but im certainly leaning towards the GBA or DS
"Keeping up with the Joneses" is one of the worst reasons to buy a kid something (though I doubt you didn't know that already).
I, like a lot of the 20-somethings here, grew up with video games just like she has. My older brothers had an Atari 2600 for as long as I can remember, then we got NES/Sega Master System in '87/'88, then the 16-bit boxes, etc. etc. with full computers strewn in between (my father worked for DEC so I got an early start there too). But even still, while my console resume reads like a completist's collection, video games didn't dominate my youth... we still were active outdoors, riding bikes, playing sports, or simply running around all day until the streetlights came on and we *had* to go in.
Having gone thru it myself, I think people put waaaaay too much of a retroactive rationale behind the "benefits" of playing video games. Cmon man--tell me with a straight face that you're getting your 5yo daughter a PSP for the "hand/eye/virtual/3d/math skills/coordination" benefits with a straight face. :roll: Stating that kids are "born digital" is a copout in this argument. With all due respect, it's more likely that this PSP/GBA will end up being a low-rent babysitter (or pacifier).
IMHO, kids don't even know how to play with real toys largely because parents don't provide them with any while they can. "smack them around in tekken while you can"? If you're grooming a kid on video games this early, trust me, there's MORE than enough time for that on the horizon. How about playing make-believe with her while you can?
This newest generation will have it the worst because theirs is the first with parents who didn't necessarily value any recreation other than electronics.
For the record, I'm a tech support engineer for UNIX hardware/software, with every intention for my children to be as technically apt as I am (i.e., beyond the needs of everyday life).