I think ultra-violent video games' primary affect is the habitual dehumanization of the target - or "enemy." The current crop of games are so amazingly vivid and realistic that it's like watching a movie... a movie that the player immerses himself in and controls. Victory is achieved through maximum destruction and the thousands upon thousands of repetitions of the "kill 'em all" sorties serve as positive reinforcement for the very behaviors we find so abhorrent in real life.
The realism of these games blurs the line between what is fantasy and what is real. The environment, the weapon and ammo selection, the tactics, as well as the planning and coordination portrayed in these games are so realistic that they can actually serve as training tools for the military. For those people already struggling with their own reality, this level of sophistication makes it too easy for the deranged to shift from game world to real world without even noticing the difference.
Cant really agree with that sentiment.
All kids past and present used imagination to kill people, back in the day it was cowboys and indians, cops and robbers or a myriad pretend games where our imaginations ran wild. Because a video game shows the "violence" on the screen it does no more than trigger your own imagination, whether with a controller or you pointing a toy cap gun actually at a "person".
What we are talking about here is anomalies with human beings, its not a normal action to think hey I might kill as many people as possible today, there is a screw loose some where which has been slowily turning for a long while. The question is what can we do to identify these types before this type of crime occurs again. Banning "assault" weapons is not the answer, passing anti firearm legislation is not the answer, especially in a country as large and diverse and with as many firearms already in the public as the US has, it would be like trying to plug the Hoover dam with a band-aid. In the past non politically times people who exhibited any type of mental retardation or dysfunction was locked up in places and never saw the light of day was this right, no but funnily enough there was no mass killings despite there being all sorts of legally obtainable semi auto and automatic firearms available. Now I am not suggest we go out willy nilly and round up all people with downs syndrome, aspergers, autism etc. But we need to be more vigilant in our schools, work etc in identifying the characteristics in people that may be susceptible to such impulses. More than that as the article suggests we do not need to give these people any type of media reinforcement or publicity if and when another event occurs.