Did you guys watch the video? I am guessing not, because the point it makes is very clear about video games being a correlation, not causation meaning that people who play violent games do so because it fits within their preconceived self. and just for clarification, violence is not bad. for example, if a person attacks another person is any violence committed by the defendant bad? I would say no, I believe in the non-aggression principle, but if someone breaks it by doing harm to another the one being harmed has every right hurt, or kill the person attacking to preserve their own life. And it is part of the reason I don't like games like GTA, or I don't plan on being a pirate on Star Citizen but do plan on being running security, bounty hunting, and merc work. When I have a cause I believe in, or a reason I feel right, I have no issues with violence in games, or in real life (when necessary) It is why I liked Watch_Dog but not GTA. It is why I hope North Koria and Syria are stopped, and Kim Jong-un and Bashar al-Assad are brought to account for their actions but don't think we should go to war with France, even though they are really weird. And your line in the sand maybe somewhere else, and that is fine, but you can see that the games I play, and the way I enjoy playing a game directly relate to my morals and the way I live my life. and that is the correlation that is too often mistaken for causation. WATCH THE VIDEO!