Sam Mitchell from the Hawthorn Hawks takes his turn on a Playstation at the AFL Premiership 2005 Sony Playstation launch at the Telstra Dome in Melbourne, Australia on Aug. 17, 2005. (Kristian Dowling/Getty Images)

Mother Feeds Gaming Addict Son by Hand as He Refuses to Budge in 48-hour Session

A mother has been filmed feeding her 13-year-old son by hand as he refuses to lift his fingers from the keyboard during a 48-hour gaming session at an internet cafe.

The boy’s eyes don’t shift from the screen as his mother shoves pieces of food in to his mouth, saying, “My poor child… Here, eat now.” Instead, he becomes agitated, worried that she may disrupt his gaming.

His mother, Lilybeth Marvel, 37, can be seen earlier in the shot ferrying the plate of breakfast from her home to the cafe in the town of Nueva Ecija in the Phillipines.

She does appear to encourage him to come home as she puts food in his mouth.

He refuses to step away from the scene during 48-hour gaming sessions 由 Daily Mail 发布于 2019年2月21日周四

According to the Daily Mail, one of the media organisations to obtain the video, she is worried that he won’t eat at all if she doesn’t bring him food during his marathon sessions of his favorite game ‘Rules of Survival’.

The boy, Carlito Garcia, has skipped off school for the binge gaming sessions, which she says leave him like a “Zombie.”

According to the Mirror, she she said, “I used to just nag about his online games. But that didn’t work. So I’m trying a different approach.”

“I try to make him feel that whatever is happening in his life, I am his mother who loves him and takes care of him.”

When she tried to ban him, he would just sneak off to indulge his habit.

She says they have pulled him out of school because of his addiction.

Carlito’s grandmother is also deeply concerned about his health and keeps sending him vitamins as she feels he would become malnourished.

He just REFUSES to stop playing. 由 Daily Mirror 发布于 2019年2月21日周四

Gaming Addiction Gets Official Recognition

Growing use of computers, smart phones and gaming devices in recent decades has left many parents worried about the potential impact on health, as studies lag behind the tech development.

Last year the World Health Organisation added “video gaming disorder” to its classification list of diseases, much to the disagreement of the video games industry.

The WHO classification lists three key symptoms.