How to control and limit game hours in PUBG
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Nomophobia could be defined as the 'fear of not having your mobile phone in hand or that its battery will run out'. A study from a couple of years ago, carried out by the McAffee company, revealed that 1 in 3 users has the firm belief that their partner pays more attention to their device than to him or her. Thus, it is normal that there is a current problem in relation to the use we give to our mobile and how it affects us on a day-to-day basis. That is why, for example, from Android 9 Pie, Google pre-installs an application called 'Digital Well-being', which offers detailed statistics on the use we give our phone, putting us in a situation and warning us if we are going too far and abusing the same.
From now on you can play PUBG in a he althier way
The notifications that reach our mobile phones are partly to blame for this addiction that we suffer. The beep that warns that we have one makes us alert and stimulates us, wanting to unlock the mobile, quickly, and see what we have new in it. Games can also be a double-edged sword, placing the youngest in a tricky situation. One of the games that has been most in question in recent times is PUBG, the alternative to Fornite in this 'Battle Royale' game. It has been accused of addiction and even banned by some countries like India, where a teenager ended up committing suicide because his mother forbade him to play the game.
Having these data on the table, it is not strange to see PUBG's new movement, which involves integrating a new 'Gameplay Management' system within the game itself that will keep players informed of the time they have been employed in the video game, encouraging them to take a break.This new function would be based on the 'Digital Well-being' of Android 9 Pie. With this new system, the PUBG user will receive a pop-up notification, notifying them of the time they have been playing it and inviting them to take a break or, directly, to stop playing.
In India they have banned playing PUBG
This system will also alert players under the age of 18 to accept a 'game notice' at login time. It is not clear what this new notice will contain, but it surely has to do with the safety of the underage user. This new move to warn minors would be PUBG's response to countries like India or Nepal, where 16 people have already been arrested for playing. Even in China, PUBG is not as bloody as we know it, there is a version of it called 'Game for Peace' in which there are neither violent deaths nor gore: the victims kneel and the executor lets them go, greeting each other. later in a friendly way.
New 'Gameplay Management' feature is now rolling out in North African and Asian countries including Indonesia, India, Nepal, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Subsequently, this new game mode will be implemented in different parts of the world. Everything to try that the user has a he althier use of the video game on their mobile phone.