March 23, 2007
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Forget getting to the highest level in the latest release of Counter-Strike, in intelligence-obsessed Korea, so-called ¡°brain-training¡± games are the latest fad. The games are available on a wide range of platforms and aim to keep the mind young, leading gamers to ask, ¡°How old is your brain?¡± Game developers are targeting a wide range of customers, from young children to the elderly, pitching games as a way to keep the mind supple. The flame was lit by Nintendo Korea, which released ¡°Brain Age,¡± its first Korean-language game, two months ago. The game sold 32,000 copies in just the first week and is a continuing top seller; it has even been promoted as being helpful in preventing dementia. With the start of the new school semester, a wave of brain-training games, mostly for mobile phones, have entered the market. Nate, a mobile service of SK Telecom, has a separate category for brain training under its mobile games section. One game specifically trains the right side of the brain; another claims to boost agility and intuition. Nexon Mobile, Com2us Corp., and Gamevil are some of the many companies developing brain-training games. ¡°These games are particularly popular because children have an excuse for playing them,¡± a Gamevil spokesman said. Specialists note that while mental exercise games are in vogue globally because of the Japanese number puzzle Sudoku, the brain-training craze in Korea is especially hot because of the nation¡¯s fascination with IQ. Han Jae-woo, head of the Korea Society Aptitude Development Co., a testing center, said that Koreans who test their children think a high IQ leads to high achievement. Not everyone is sold. ¡°You¡¯d probably get more intelligent by reading books than playing games,¡± Kim Jin-yeol wrote on a local Web site. ¡°But it¡¯s better than playing war games,¡± another user argued. By Wohn Dong-hee Staff Writer [wohn@joongang.co.kr] |

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