Well, we started on video games at a very young age. Let's see. Mortal Kombat was definitely a no-no. But we were allowed to play Zelda and...Double Dragon 1, 2, and 3, and pretty much anything that wasn't overtly evil (or that my mom wasn't playing herself), like say, Castlevania or Ghosts & Goblins. But I'd heard urban legends about video games picking up and playing themselves, so I was kinda scared of those games anyway, though I read a lot about Ghosts & Goblins in a Nintendo magazine we had.
The irony? They allowed us to have Final Fight, but not Final Fight 2 or 3. They allowed us to have Street Fighter II, but not Street Fighter II Turbo. But I sure played a lot of Mega Man. In later years, I discovered Final Fantasy 7, 8, 9, and 10, with their overt magic use. I'd play a game otherwise until I could confirm actual demons in it or something. Mom didn't really monitor that too closely once we got old enough; we could make our own decisions.
My brother stuck to sports games but I ended up going towards RPGs, mostly Final Fantasy, but by then I was already in college. As a teenager, it was more so Mega Man and Mario and...more Zelda. Oh, we were allowed to play GoldenEye, too. That was quite a stress-reliever back in high school. Recognizing that killing people in real life is different from telling a computer program to kill another computer program that happens to look somewhat like a human, I think we all got along quite well.
I just ignored the talks and parts about violent video games. As long as it wasn't too graphic, I figured, no big deal. Most games I played, you were fighting robots or alien creatures or Goombas, and either way, if you press Reset, all the characters you killed get a resurrection anyway. So, evidently, this helps us to see on a small scale what God will do on a larger scale in the new system.
--sd-7