Man in China dies after three-day Internet session
BEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese man dropped dead after playing Internet games for three consecutive days, state media said on Monday as China seeks to wean Internet addicts offline.
The man from the southern boomtown of Guangzhou, aged about 30, died on Saturday after being rushed to the hospital from the Internet cafe, local authorities were quoted by the Beijing News as saying.
"Police have ruled out the possibility of suicide," the newspaper said, adding that exhaustion was the most likely cause of death. It did not say what game he was playing.
China, worried about the spread of pornography and politically incorrect content, has banned the opening of new cybercafes this year and issued orders limiting the time Internet users can spend playing online.
In April, President Hu Jintao launched a campaign to rid the Internet of "unhealthy" content and make it a platform for Communist Party doctrine.
A sign that you play too much.....
A sign that you play too much.....
This is what gets to me. . . guy dies so now we want to rid the interwebs of everything fun? ~.~In April, President Hu Jintao launched a campaign to rid the Internet of "unhealthy" content and make it a platform for Communist Party doctrine
75 RDM, 75 BLM, 75 MNK, 75 SAM, 56 WHM
------------ Relic AF ------------
RDM - 4/5 DRG - 3/5
BLM - 0/5 WHM - 0/5
MNK - 5/5 SAM - 4/5
------------ Relic AF ------------
RDM - 4/5 DRG - 3/5
BLM - 0/5 WHM - 0/5
MNK - 5/5 SAM - 4/5
Follow-up.....
wow.....it's like a curfew for the internet....
China web-user dies after three-day online binge
BEIJING (AFP) - A man in southern China collapsed and died after a three-day marathon online session at a cybercafe, state media reported on Monday.
The web-user, estimated to be 30 years old, suddenly collapsed in front of his computer terminal in Guangdong province, and emergency personnel were unable to revive him, the Beijing News reported.
"According to preliminary findings, the length of time this man spent online might have triggered heart problems," the paper quoted a local hospital emergency medic in the city of Zhongshan as saying.
The paper did not provide the man's name or the online activities he was engaged in.
Worried about growing Internet addiction, China's government has taken steps to combat the problem, including forcing online gaming sites to dock the points of gamers who stay online too long.
wow.....it's like a curfew for the internet....
I haven't touched chinese Kartrider in a while, but there is a new style of registration of the game. It requires the user to create a specific type of ID which involves the numbers in your birthdate. It checks the ID to determine whether or not the user is of certain age. After playing 3hrs, the ID is checked and limited or 0 points/exp per race are distributed. For an ID where the age of the user is an adult, no penalties are given.



- Seres
- King Behemoth's Personal Chef
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Or you can be like this guy.Amonet wrote:well that's one way to get kids to do their homework
http://lifeparticles.com/2007/grade-gru ... suspended/

lvl 75 BLM (AF2 2/5), 70 SMN (AF2 1/5), 51 WAR, 40 NIN, 37 WHM, 37 RDM, 33 BST
Rank 10 Windy, 10 Sandy
Woodworking 74+2 Cooking 60 Smithing 51







