The Entertainment Software Association (video games' version of the MPAA) released results of a survey that show a third of parents surveyed play video games. Caveats are that the sample size is only 501; it's 501 "nationally representative parents who have children between the ages of 2 and 17 in their households" rather than a random sampling; the margin of error isn't given. So this probably isn't very reliable data. But it's still interesting -- and shows that the best way to keep an eye on children's media consumption isn't to get the government to regulate it, but to watch, play, listen and read with them.




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