By Richard Clark –
September 30, 2009
A fascinating new study likens video game battles to war in the following way: When you beat someone in a competition, you experience a surge of testosterone. However, a study suggests this is only true if you’ve beaten people you don’t know. Researchers at the University of...
A fascinating new study likens video game battles to war in the following way:
When you beat someone in a competition, you experience a surge of testosterone. However, a study suggests this is only true if you’ve beaten people you don’t know. Researchers at the University of Missouri in Columbia claim the testosterone surge is greatly reduced when friends beat each other.
via Study finds friends don’t get off on fragging friends | Fidgit.
About the Author
Richard Clark (Co-Founder/Editor-in-Chief) has spent his entire life writing, reading, listening, and playing. He has a Bachelors in Theology from the Baptist College of Florida and has a Master of Arts in Theology and the Arts from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He lives in Louisville, KY where he is the classroom technology manager at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. In addition to writing at Christ and Pop Culture, he is also a staff writer for
Kill Screen Magazine's website and has written for various other outlets such as Paste, Gamasutra, and Collide.
Email: deadyetliving [at] gmail [dot] com. Twitter:
@deadyetliving. Xbox Live: deadyetliving
From the beating side of things I agree, but for me at least, losing to friends is worse than losing to strangers. I have no idea how that translates to actual chemical release in my body though, maybe it’s all mental.