Wed Jan 9, 2008 5:02PM EST
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The creators of Re-Mission, the video game designed to help kids with cancer visualize their chemo treatments zapping cancer cells and inspire them to stay on track with their treatments, is taking on a new health issue via a video game: childhood obesity.
HopeLab has a booth at the CES Sandbox Summit to showcase its online competition to drum up ideas for a video game that will get kids moving, keep them active, and turn back the tide on childhood obesity. The competition is called Ruckus Nation.
Ellen LaPointe, HopeLab's vice president of Strategic Initiatives, says the company challenged teens to come up with ideas for games that will appeal to middle-school-age kids. Think a new Dance Dance Revolution that will get limbs moving and hearts pumping. There were 429 submissions, and judges are now sifting through the proposals to find their way to the winner.
The winner with the best idea will win $75,000 in March.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Child obesity = Fast Food and no Sports. Too many families dine out 4 days a week or more. If your excuse is that work is too busy or you don't have time at home then you shouldn't have had kids. Get out and play baseball and soccer or tennis with your kids and they won't be fat.
doing a hopelab project for anyone from young child to senior adult that will be tailored to specific goals and exercise and diet challenges - the title: hopelab is very excellent for our struggle to turn the tide of obesity of anyone everywhere
To magpagbst and jasonuga311...we all know the problems and causes of childhood obesity, and what the most common sense solution is. But, obviously, the common sense solution isn't done by everyone. Why not offer another option/tool to fight this issue?
to turtletracks . . . what issue are you referencing? i was referring to apathetic and ignorant parenting . . . and childhood obesity is just one tragic result of myriad issues that result from bad parenting . . . it is myopic to think that tossing another video game into this mix even remotely addresses this issue . . .
| Computers | Home Office | Wi-Fi & Networking | Phones & PDAs | Cameras & Camcorders | TV & Home Theater | Portable Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 Posted by magpagbst on Wed Jan 9, 2008 5:25PM EST Report Abuse
it is a sick society that we must now turn to video games to compensate for woefully bad, apathetic parenting . . . wouldn't it be more appropriate to come up with a video game to promote better parenting?? . . . ah . . . forget it . . .