A generator-powered arcade in Kabul, Afghanistan provides the city’s inhabitants a welcome respite from the ongoing war and helps keep wayward kids off the street and out of trouble.
14-yeard old Ubaydollah Sharafian spoke to the Christian Science Monitor about the arcade, saying, “We come here to play games and relax from street-begging.”
All such forms of entertainment were banned when Afghanistan was under Taliban rule, perhaps leading inhabitants to embrace the ability to forget their troubles for a few minutes even more than might be the norm.
As a youngster in the midst of a game succinctly stated, “I don’t want this game to finish, I want to keep on playing forever.”
Another passage from the CSM article:
“The lads come here and stay off the streets,” said Abdulghaffar Sediqi, the proprietor of one store as he watched his young customers playing Mortal Kombat, a 1990s arcade game that placed martial arts warriors against one another. “They’re not filching pockets, they’re not sniffing glue.”



Comments
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
Yet another example of the good that the US military is doing for the people over there.
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With the first link, the chain is forged.
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
So soon Afghanistan can claim too that the violence escalated in that country when video games entered it.
Oh wait a minute...
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
I wonder when we'll hear of some idiot suicide bombing it.
Still, glad those kids are getting to do something normal for a change.
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
how long until someone claims there werent shootings in afghanistan before games
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
I wouldn't be surprised, there have been dumber claims.
Re: Afghani Arcade Offers Break from Reality
Classic game glad they are able to enjoy the arcade.