2024 Fundraising - $1102 / $2000 CDN for the year, June/July Renewal. Paypal Donation Link US dollars

Gaming and the military

All discussions regarding Board, Card, and RPG Gaming, including industry discussion, that don't belong in one of the other gaming forums.

Moderators: The Preacher, $iljanus, Zaxxon

Post Reply
User avatar
The Mad Hatter
Posts: 6322
Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 1:36 am
Location: Funkytown

Gaming and the military

Post by The Mad Hatter »

Found this article here.

"Camp Fallujah, Iraq — Soon after the battle for Fallujah ended in November, U.S. Marines brought their Xbox consoles, Gameboys and laptops forward and started fighting the Covenant hordes in Halo, Mario and Luigi's worst enemies and those irksome roommates from The Sims.

At the marine base several kilometres southeast, high-speed wires snake down hallways, through doors and out windows. The Navy engineers play Half-Life 2. At the gym, where seven Playstations get heavy use, marines wage Madden NFL 2005 tournaments. Neverwinter Nights reigns in the public affairs office.

The video-game generation has grown up and gone to war, taking along its preferred form of entertainment.

Never has that been clearer than during the current Iraq conflict and at Camp Fallujah, where marines and soldiers play because they have been playing all their lives. Games relieve both the stress of warfare and the crush of boredom.

“You keep focus on what we're here for, but you've got to go somewhere else sometimes,” said Staff Sergeant Robert Sloan, 26. “Sometimes you read too many books.”

Games are as ubiquitous at Camp Fallujah and around it as tattoos, buzz cuts and shouts of “Hoorah” from one marine to another. When the power goes out, a Humvee battery and a pair of alligator clips are all the resourceful gamer needs to resume the digitized fight.

The military has long brought the newest technology with it to war zones – and then provided for those who forgot to bring what they wanted. At the post-exchange in Camp Fallujah, a stack of Playstations and Xboxes share an aisle with DVD players, televisions and microwave ovens.

The “Game Zone” sits in the corner, stocked with some 20 game titles across the aisle from racks full of box sets from the band Nirvana and DVDs of the 70s TV comedy Three's Company.

“Everything we get in sells right out. Entertainment is entertainment,” said Staff Sgt. Franklin Williams, an exchange specialist at the P/X. “They like the latest games – military games, car games, everything with speed.”

Psychologists who treat combat stress recommend video games for marines to unwind and boost morale.

“I always talk to people about all kinds of positive, pleasant events that they can use,” said Lieutenant Erin Simmons, a psychologist with Bravo Surgical Company.

“I've heard some people say they like to play the video games with the aggressive military content. I've also heard people say they don't want to play those types of games, they don't need to be reminded of it. But as far as a pleasant event, it can take their mind of things, help them relax. We encourage it.”

The activity is highly social as service personnel place bets on the outcome of sports games and jeer at one another during multiplayer rounds of Halo.

It also helps alleviate homesickness. A “Morale, Welfare and Recreation” centre just off the gym is filled with Playstation 2 consoles. Marines back from the fight stop in for a few hours to unwind.

The military awoke to the power of video games years ago.

It developed the America's Army game as a recruitment tool, giving civilians a taste of the soldier life with scenarios that let players co-operate on-line in raids on guerrilla camps and bridges, among several other scenarios.

Some branches of the service have incorporated games into their training and then sold off commercial versions – Operation Flashpoint was one, and the marines for the first time are helping produce their own game, called Close Combat: First to Fight.

On the base, marines who have seen combat say they were aided by games they had played beforehand. Those games, they say, taught them how quickly something can go wrong.

For instance, in the hyper-realistic SOCOM 2: U.S. Navy Seals for the Playstation 2, players issue commands to their teams in a highly co-ordinated ballet of violence.

“When we cover houses, you got your guys coming in behind you covering your flank,” said Lance Corporal Patrick Hopper. “When you take over a house and you're playing SOCOM, you kind of get used to it when you get there.”

Certainly some games are more popular than others. Few people had purchased the puzzle game Tetris Worlds or The Hobbit, which is aimed at kids. Rows of Nintendo's Metroid Prime: Echoes for the GameCube console went untouched, probably because the Xbox and Playstation are far more popular here.

Thirty copies of Halo 2 disappeared in hours. Some soldiers bought the game even though they did not even have an Xbox, while others bought an Xbox just so they could play.

But marines scoff at the idea that games could somehow prepare them for combat in any significant way. In video games, they say, players are generally willing to risk their lives. That was not always the case in Fallujah.

“When bullets are zooming by you, there's nothing like it,” Sgt. Jeffery Mickel said. “Some guys get scared and take cover, other guys go right ahead and take care of the threat.”

Games have also not caught up with reality: civilians blending in with insurgents, and soldiers not being able to distinguish between them.

Nor do games cover the types of scenarios faced in the combat.

“In a game, you can die and press start and go all over again. This is a little bit different,” said Sgt. James Atakoglu, who drove a bulldozer during the battle for Fallujah, often smashing down buildings where insurgents were believed to be hiding. “I don't think games are going to have a dozer crashing into a building.”
In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
- George Orwell
User avatar
Zekester
Posts: 6613
Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 12:37 pm
Location: Pittsburgh

Post by Zekester »

dbt, can you imagine such a thing? :shock:
Name the 3 branches of the US Government: "Judicial, legislative....I can twerk"
Jeff V
Posts: 36487
Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 7:17 pm
Location: Nowhere you want to be.

Post by Jeff V »

A few years ago, Ft. Irwin approached us (The Wargamer) about setting up and maintaining a gaming LAN. The project was too small and Ft Irwin is in the middle of nowhere; even with facilities provided, there was no way to crunch the numbers into a profitable venture.
User avatar
dbt1949
Posts: 25793
Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 12:34 am
Location: Hogeye Arkansas

Post by dbt1949 »

When I was in the military overseas I was playing board wargames(Avalon Hill and SPI) all the time.
If electronic gaming had been available to me I'd have probably played it instead of or too.
My fondest dream was to have a big metal boardgame map mounted on the wall and have magnetic counters.I made a prototype that worked okay as long as there was no stacking.The north and south poles of the magnets screwed things up quite a bit.
Ye Olde Farte
Double Ought Forty
aka dbt1949
Post Reply