Study: Players start slowing down at age 24 - Page 8
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SelimSC
Turkey39 Posts
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lessQQmorePEWPEW
Jamaica921 Posts
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roythereaper
Canada4 Posts
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maartendq
Belgium3115 Posts
On April 12 2014 12:07 Havik_ wrote: I'll never accept that age is an excuse for being bad at the game or not producing results. You have players in the NFL that are in their late 30's, you have powerlifters in their 40's and 50's. Not to mention people like Jack Lalanne who are able to remain physically active into their 90's until they drop dead. You're telling me people are capable of all that, but can't play games optimally past age 24? Lol.. just lol. Not buying it. Those powerlifters in their forties and fifties will have to put in far more effort to reach a certain level than a twenty-year-old will. At an older age people generally have more important things to worry about than how fast and how strong they are too. Priorities and interests change as you get older. You get a partner, a job, a place of your own, kids maybe ... I think the main reason why so many progamers 'retire' around 25-26 is that they start to realise that they won't be able to do this for all of their lives. Many of them skipped higher education degrees just to become as good as they are, but the word "progamer" doesn't mean anything on your CV. On the contrary, where I'm from they'd probably ask you if you had nothing better to do than play video games all the time. Look at Boxer: a brood war legend, managed to make some money off of his BW fame in SC2 but now he plays poker for a living (if I'm not mistaken). Is he really gonna rely on gambling to finance the coming 40-50 years of his life? This is why I really respect Stephano and Thorzain. These guys realised that, and got out while they still could (admittedly after having raked in a lot of prize money). | ||
Chutoro
New Zealand95 Posts
On April 12 2014 13:18 Knowerz wrote: Ooh, I'll try. More liquor has more people in rehab/programs has more priests? Wrong. Although number of people in rehab programs would probably be pretty closely correlated as well. The answer is that they are all proportional to population number - so larger communities have more priests, more total liquor consumption and more of a lot of other things. Population number is an example of a hidden variable - if X and Y both depend on Z, but you're only measuring X and Y and have forgotten that Z exists, then it can be tempting to conclude that X causes Y or vice versa. In reality X and Y may be completely unrelated, and just appear closely related because of the hidden variable. | ||
kaluro
Netherlands760 Posts
On April 11 2014 11:26 CrushDog5 wrote: That's actually a mistake. I meant to type that I would NOT expect everyone to age in exactly the same way, so in a sample of over 3000 players not every 35yr old will be slower that every 30 year old, even in the same league. I'd say it's impossible to determine the factors in which older players decline. - Getting a fulltime job - Getting a fulltime relationship - Getting children Each of the above will seperately impact the free time you have to play/practice and will also (indirectly) adjust your mentality and approach at gaming, most likely. There's so many different factors that you really can't seriously link aging <-> speed. For example, testosterone averagely peaks at your 24th till your 28th, at which a decline will happen, and you say that at the prime of a male (age 24), they start declining in cognitive abilities? Sounds off. On April 12 2014 12:07 Havik_ wrote: I'll never accept that age is an excuse for being bad at the game or not producing results. You have players in the NFL that are in their late 30's, you have powerlifters in their 40's and 50's. Not to mention people like Jack Lalanne who are able to remain physically active into their 90's until they drop dead. You're telling me people are capable of all that, but can't play games optimally past age 24? Lol.. just lol. Not buying it. Muscle and strengths take years to build, bodybuilding/powerlifting is one of the sports, at which athletes get better by age. You don't 'max out' on your muscle/strength potential till your mid/late 30s, since it's an ongoing process that takes literally years. | ||
trada
Germany347 Posts
BUT I'M STILL SHOOTIN. I'M STILL GETTIN THE HEADSHOTS, ITS LIKE BOOM HEADSHOT, BOOM HEADSHOT, BOOM HEADSHOOOOOOT | ||
CrushDog5
Canada207 Posts
On April 12 2014 20:22 LastAergerer wrote: Dual-task performance could also contribute to increased and improved use of game mechanics that reduce cognitive load. Are you able to make a determination on the possibility that dual-task performance might actually improve as players get older? The preponderance of evidence is that dual-task performance declines with age, which is why we thought to include workers made in the study. There is some evidence (which I'm a bit skeptical of) that suggests that playing some kinds of video games helps reduce some of the affects of aging. If that kind of effect were going on here, though, you would expect it to get larger as league increased (more experience, better dual task) and there fore we should see the affect of age on dual-task get smaller as league increases (i.e., there should be a age*league interaction). We don't find that, though. | ||
RandomPlayer
Russian Federation374 Posts
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aTnClouD
Italy2428 Posts
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TurboMaN
Germany925 Posts
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Jank
United States308 Posts
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Rollora
2450 Posts
On April 11 2014 08:50 CrushDog5 wrote: I would expect that everyone ages in exactly the same way as everyone else. Remember, though, that aging and experience are independent factors. You can get better with practice, even as you get slower with age. this is wrong. Maturing and aging are different for each person. Also "experience" and how fast it is gained and how it is used is different for every person, depending on LOTS of things in your brain, education, society etc. | ||
Rollora
2450 Posts
On April 14 2014 02:57 aTnClouD wrote: I got way faster from 25 to 26. I call correlation/causation well you got faster but you sure didn't hit your ceiling before then | ||
vult
United States9395 Posts
On April 14 2014 07:09 Rollora wrote: well you got faster but you sure didn't hit your ceiling before then That's like the most bullshit comeback to that I've ever heard haha. | ||
sluggaslamoo
Australia4494 Posts
- Teamliquid Logic | ||
StarStruck
25339 Posts
On April 14 2014 04:07 Jank wrote: Yeah this crap is total bs. Top ssbm melee players are getting up there in age and that game is a way better example of reflexes(reacting as fast as possible to whats on the screen) wheras sc2 is a lot more about raw speed/multitask. I wonder if this study took into account the amount of time players had time to practice or their total amount of time invested in the game. I don't care if you're 35, your only excuse for losing is that you didn't practice and focus hard enough. While I don't agree with the method surely it would be different from game to game. I mean take the ten plus years of history we've had with BW and all the analyzing we've done with it. Those statistics don't lie. On April 13 2014 19:44 kaluro wrote: I'd say it's impossible to determine the factors in which older players decline. - Getting a fulltime job - Getting a fulltime relationship - Getting children Each of the above will seperately impact the free time you have to play/practice and will also (indirectly) adjust your mentality and approach at gaming, most likely. There's so many different factors that you really can't seriously link aging <-> speed. For example, testosterone averagely peaks at your 24th till your 28th, at which a decline will happen, and you say that at the prime of a male (age 24), they start declining in cognitive abilities? Sounds off. Muscle and strengths take years to build, bodybuilding/powerlifting is one of the sports, at which athletes get better by age. You don't 'max out' on your muscle/strength potential till your mid/late 30s, since it's an ongoing process that takes literally years. It actually really isn't that impossible when we look at the Koreans who's full-time job was playing BW. Did some of them have girlfriends and play other things like WoW (cough)? Yep. We've seen the decline. SC2 is just more widespread where technically everyone can fall under the category as a "pro gamer," but that wasn't really what this study was all about. Maybe we should bring up those old bw threads. There's a reason why teams back then were trying to recruit young guns. Just saying. | ||
EngrishTeacher
Canada1109 Posts
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sluggaslamoo
Australia4494 Posts
On April 14 2014 10:17 StarStruck wrote: While I don't agree with the method surely it would be different from game to game. I mean take the ten plus years of history we've had with BW and all the analyzing we've done with it. Those statistics don't lie. It actually really isn't that impossible when we look at the Koreans who's full-time job was playing BW. Did some of them have girlfriends and play other things like WoW (cough)? Yep. We've seen the decline. SC2 is just more widespread where technically everyone can fall under the category as a "pro gamer," but that wasn't really what this study was all about. Maybe we should bring up those old bw threads. There's a reason why teams back then were trying to recruit young guns. Just saying. Exactly, nearly every rebuttal to this study is just purely anecdotal. ... when the best anecdotal evidence that exists is of all the older BW progamers who complained that their hands could no longer keep up with their minds and that they had to play strategic to compensate. | ||
stapla05
Australia64 Posts
From my experience im 23 turning 24 iv lost speed due to less motivation to play. But this could vary from person to person there are a lot of factor to consider. But you do lose speed as you age. | ||
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