WoW, Casually: Playing with your preschooler

In the comments for Drama Mamas, Orkchop asked about tips for playing WoW with his 3 year old daughter. Since, as he put it, this is more of a Mama question than a drama question and I also have a 3 year old daughter, I thought I'd create a guide for playing WoW with preschoolers. Parents have limited playtime due to their family priorities -- not necessarily because they don't want to play as much as the more hardcore players. So mixing parental duties and leisure time is efficient as well as rewarding.
The question some of you may ask is, "Should children that young play video games?" And the answer is not just "yes", but "Yes!" At the beginning of this year, I spent some time working with getting my daughter comfortable with the computer, concentrating on mouse manipulation and keyboard movement while playing many of the free preschool-age video games out there. Within a week, she was reading words like "Play" and "Skip" and navigating through Nick Jr.'s site to her favorite radio station, which she listens to while playing with her toys. The freely available games on sites like PBS Kids have really improved many of her developmental skill sets and her computer skills are now better than most of her grandparents'. Of course, now I'm having to closely monitor her computing time, lest I be subjected to fart videos from YouTube... again.
But don't just take my word for it. Sesame Workshop highly recommends that children play video games for:
healthy behaviors, traditional skills like reading and math, and 21st-century strengths such as critical thinking, global learning, and programming design.
Yeah, those are the same people who educated most of us with Sesame Street. They are actively trying to get government and industry support for digital learning tools, while trying to counteract the negative stereotypes about video games.
I'm on record for thinking parents should play WoW with their older children. Preschoolers are different from Grade School age children, however, in that they cannot fully read, have different playstyles and have varying developmental needs. After much research and practice, I offer the following tips for incorporating WoW and other MMOs into your parental nurturing time. Note: I'll be using the pronoun "she" throughout this guide, but of course the same applies to boys, too.
Don't get a separate account She's not really ready to progress a character by herself or alongside yours as of yet. That kind of structured play is not going to interest her and will only frustrate you. The time will come when you will be able to play your characters together, but that time is not now.
Character creation is fun
The Spawn loves to play dress up and creating characters is one of her favorite MMO related things, as well. The character creation in WoW is ok, but it really isn't as good as say, City of Heroes/Villains. You can let her play alone, making throwaway characters, for long periods of time. When it's time to create a character to play together, guide her in a direction that will make it fun for you, too. But let her pick the look herself. The Spawn wanted to play a character "with arrows", but was unwilling to compromise on the race -- it was Gnome or nothing. Thus, Itchee the Warlock (above) was born. Her first CoV Villain, pictured right, is completely her creation and named Moonbandage. I think I am going to start having her name my characters, too.
Teach the difference between right and wrong
Just because you are hanging with your prodigy, doesn't mean you have to stay away from the Death Knight starting quests. Nor do you have to avoid activities that involve killing cute fuzzy creatures (though I do try to use the word "defeat" instead of "kill"). Go ahead and play a villain and complete questionably immoral quests, just tell her what you are doing is wrong and only make-believe. Which leads us to...
Teach the difference between reality and fantasy
Contrary to what the alarmist thought-police of previous decades predicted, my generation did not grow up thinking that falls off of cliffs and explosions were survivable. We knew the difference between reality and fantasy. Make no mistake: this is a very valuable lesson. But I don't need to tell casual WoW players this. We play for fun and stress release, not to hone our homicidal skills. In WoW, death is not permanent. Our pets come back, the mobs we kill respawn and we are resurrected. We don't have Gnomes and Tauren and we can't ride around on dragons -- Azeroth is a make-believe playland. She probably already has a clear idea what is real and what is pretend, but playing fantasy games together will actually strengthen this.
Let her play alone
Playing alone allows her to exercise her imagination and gives her a healthy amount of control. Let her play on a level 30+ druid (shapechanging!) or a character with a flying mount and allow her minimally supervised free play. You might want to bank your gear in case of mishaps.
Play one character together
Just like the couple who overcomes adversity to play together or these cats, the two of you will probably have a great time controlling the same character together. The Spawn uses the keyboard and I use the mouse. We have an absolute blast defeating mobs and questing. Pro tip: Send your character bags and some gold when you are not playing together. Not being able to afford training and the run to the nearest mailbox is not stuff that is likely to hold her attention.
Be open to what is fun to her
Just like twigs, rocks and bugs can be endlessly distracting when taking walks with your preschooler, the things she finds entertaining in WoW are going to be unexpected and not always fun for you. The Spawn actually likes to sit down in between battles and refill mana. She worries that we'll not have enough water and makes sure that all trips to town involve restocking. I know. I don't get it either, but whatever floats her boat. Pro tip: Bank the starter outfits and all distinct, visible armor collected afterward for dress up sessions.
Keep it positive
Sometimes it's hard not to get frustrated due to running off of cliffs and avoidable deaths, but this isn't about progressing a character, it is about together time. This applies to couples playing together, too. Save any leveling aspirations for your non parenting playtime. Keep it happy and nurturing and you'll both have a better time.
Journal your time together
This actually surprised me during my "research". The Spawn enjoys looking at screenshots of her characters almost as much as she does the pictures of our recent Zoo visit. You can create a journal using a WoW.com profile, add to your blog or just keep a folder of screenshots to look through periodically. Playing together or reminiscing about playing together -- it's all good.
Of course, you should also be making sure your child stays healthy and active. All parents know this. But adding WoW to your preschooler's indoor activities has benefits for both you and her. Sharing hobbies with your children has always been considered good parenting. The Spawn thinks yarn is pretty cool, but she's having a bit more fun with Itchee. And that's okay with me.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, WoW, Casually






Reader Comments (Page 6 of 6)
lockanon Jul 15th 2009 5:29PM
Wow.... out of that article, you got
"Blizzard is aiming at the preschool market as their next demographic"
WTF is wrong with you? Did you actually read it or just glaze over after reading the title?
FFS man, this is about spending time together with your child... Not killing anything and everything you come across, in fact I'm pretty sure the author said you discuss what's going on and, oh, I don't know, play WITH them. This is not an advertisement for bringing in three year olds to play, although with the alarmingly high population of losers like yourself, I wouldn't mind an influx of fresh minds to even the average IQ.
L2Read
and btw if your comment was supposed to be sarcastic, extra fails for you, bc it doesn't come off as such.
lockanon Jul 15th 2009 5:32PM
Failcomment
actually replied to xaospro...
you guys ever gonna fix this bug...or do we get to see comments like this forever?
Mechanik Jul 16th 2009 6:09AM
I'm torn on this. If you have a kid, you should really drag your ass away from the computer to interact with it. Teaching your sprog "spatial awareness" through WoW is B.S., how about playing outside?
Being a player myself I'm not damning the game, but it is pretty addicting and turning your kids onto something addicting is probably not a good idea.
FWIW, I don't plan to ever have kids, so this is a moot point for me.
Disanidi Jul 16th 2009 8:46AM
I like how you say, "My prejudice is only against the cult of 'America and Americans are always right." Do you not know why I put the book "The Age of American Unreason." up as my source?
One reason is because, studies just don't show up on the internet. Well, not easily accessible anyways. If you want to link a study you have to dig it up forever, hope that it got newsworthy, or quote a book which had the study in it.
The book actually used a study that supported children using computers and t.v., then the book refuted it and showed an opposing study.
I can find neither study online, and I am not going to waste my time. If you really want to know about it, read the book "The Age of American Unreason."
BitterCupOJoe Jul 16th 2009 9:55AM
"If a kid's going to develop Autism, they will, whether they watch tv and play video games or not" is as ridiculous a statement as "if someone is going to develop lung cancer they will, regardless of whether they smoke and inhale asbestos or not." Only an idiot would say the latter with the evidence we have now, and we're beginning to have enough evidence to say the same about the former. There's a reason studies like the one I linked above are peer-reviewed, and it's precisely to make sure they're well run and not intentionally tilted toward one side of the debate or the other.
Ohrioh Jul 16th 2009 10:25AM
All I can think of is a family guy quote to go here...
"Cigarettes killed my father and raped my mother"
I currently don't have children. I see everything though has a potential to becoming "addictive" which is why every thing should be taken in moderation. There was no where in the article that said "Have you child play WoW or else..." but same goes for "WoW will make you child like the trade chat".
What makes these kids act like they do on trade chat? Maybe a lack of parental supervision, maybe the schools and their friends, or perhaps the way their role model(s) act.
Make case and point why things are good and/or bad all you want, but just remember, as Mark Twain said "There are only two types of lies... damned lies and statistics."
Jolina Jul 21st 2009 8:59AM
I really enjoyed the article. My three grandchildren and I have been playing WoW together for over a year. It is enjoyable and can be very interesting watching their responses to various situations in game. The girls like to collect pets and clothes. My grandson loves the Orc characters and fighting with a rogue. It is something we can all do together.
Clarick Jul 21st 2009 2:00PM
I recently got my 7 year old son his own account. I rolled a new toon to level with and I will only play that toon with him. He is having a blast. The story of WoW is keeping him interested. I agree with the comment about things that catch there attention. My son spend nearly an hour swimming in the SW canals and when we are questing all he wants to do is heal me (he is playing a NE Druid) so I can't complain. He told me the only reason he wanted to play the game is to play with me (awwww)
I agree that it teaches alot of skills. It helps reading to because they try harder to read in game so they know whats going on. Sadly tho...he tells me to turn every squirrel we pass into a sheep with my mage...lol