format_quote Originally Posted by
Nitro Zeus
Let me guess, this immorality depends on what this person does? I mean if he is driving a car and kill the people, this would become immorality for him? And this depends on mission whether they are immoral and moral?
all what I said is just about dopamine
Besides that there is adrenaline which is also one of the arm of game developers in marketing games
Dr. Kardaras, discusses how game developers use tests to measure dopamine and adrenaline levels in order to make video games as addicting as possible. The developers strap beta-testing teens with galvanic skin responses, EKG, and blood pressure gauges. If the game doesn't spike their blood pressure to 180 over 140, they go back and tweak the game to make it have more of an adrenaline-rush effect. The problem is that adrenaline rush affects what's called the H-P-A Axis (Hypothalamic Pituitary Adrenal Axis) and creates the fight-or-flight adrenal response. But that fight-or-flight response in nature is a fairly brief event—you get chased by a dog, your heart races, and your adrenaline surges, but then you calm down when the threat is gone.With video games, however, you sits and plays for hours of adrenal-elevated fight-or-flight. This is not a good thing. Research has shown that this latest generation of games significantly raises dopamine levels, the key neurotransmitter associated with our pleasure/reward pathways and the key neurotransmitter in addiction dynamics. One study showed that video games raise dopamine to the same degree that sex does, and almost as much as cocaine does.So this combo of adrenaline and dopamine are a potent one-two punch with regards to addiction.