Being a strong, energetic student at Brigham Young University (USA), and prominent in school as a wrestler, in 2012, Logan Visser fell into a spiral of game addiction and his life of work.
Addiction pushed Logan’s life off track, ruining previously outlined future plans.
Video games cost Logan relationships, education, and health.
Logan often spends up to 16 hours a day playing League of Legends, skipping his studies and part-time job.
In just six months, Logan gained weight rapidly, lost all his friends, failed many subjects and could not complete many courses.
Logan is just one of countless typical cases of game addiction.
Dr. Amanda Giordano, an expert on game addiction and lecturer at the University of Georgia, said: `There are many studies showing that for some people, playing games becomes a compulsive hobby. They use games
The World Health Organization estimates that about 3% – 4% of game players suffer from the above disorder;
After being pushed into the darkest pit of his life by a video game, Logan overcame it and his current life is bright again.
![The tragic scene of the boy selling his blood to get money to play games, 11 years of living in a nightmare 2 The tragic scene of the boy selling his blood to get money to play games, 11 years of living in a nightmare](https://the-yin-yang-shop.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/the-yin-yang-shop.com-the-tragic-scene-of-the-boy-selling-his-blood-to-g-2.jpg)
The inspiration for Logan to quit gaming was his son, now 8 months old.
Even though he used to be a game addict, the 29-year-old father said he would not completely ban his son from playing games but would guide him so that he would not follow in his footsteps.