PSN to SEN: Time to rage quit? - DarkFeed
18 hours 42 mins ago
Just how much do video-games affect our very day lives? Mike Fahey of Kotaku has found himself eating eggs nearly every morning after seeing them in Metal Gear Solid 4.
In-Game advertisements might persuede us to buy certain products, but do simple, subtle things in games (like a character cooking eggs) affect our daily life too?
Since playing through Metal Gear Solid IV, I've gone through a dozen eggs a week. I never used to eat this many eggs, but there I am, nearly every morning, cracking open fresh ones into a hot frying pan, pausing to watch the egg white turn from translucent to opaque, humming a little song to myself. Hell, I never really ate eggs sunny side up before the damn game came out. I was a scramblin' man. Quick, easy, no fuss. What has this stupid game done to me?
Is this an isolated case, or have you folks ever found yourself eating, drinking, or doing things a certain way after seeing it in a game? I'm not talking purchasing large baskets of Axe deodorant due to an in-game ad here - we've all done that. I'm talking more subtle things here. Going on a fresh fruit kick after a Pac-Man marathon, or getting really into curry after watching the marathon curry cutscene in Xenosaga II? How much power do video games have over our daily habits?
News story attached to:








Comments
And if realised it influenced him why did he keep doing it?
Games do influence but I doubt that drastically
They were delicious, and I've been eating them like that for a while now.
Why would he stop just because he knew MGS4 influenced him? You make it sound like a bad thing. It has nothing to do with him being "bright" or not.
Then one day I saw them being cooked on a TV show and thought "hmm, they don't look half bad". So I made some, and gawd, they were delicious.
Pancakes are now a regular weekend breakfast for me. Good stuff.
You have to get the idea to do things from SOMEWHERE, and in this guy's case, the 'having fried eggs' idea came from MGS4. Ads work much the same way, but they're deliberate and targeted, whereas this was not intentional (I would think).
This news story is archived and is closed to comments now.