[quote name='Blaster man']That's kind of self righteous dont you think? It sounds like you're guaranteeing the safety of the device though I know you wouldn't pay for medical bills for children after you convince their parents that its safe and you don't have to live with a kid that you disabled.
You know what other warning video games have? Seizure warnings and some games DO cause seizures in epileptics yet that would be considered covering their asses. I wouldn't recommend an epileptic play super star dust or geometry wars.
There are always people out there that claim something is just fine because no one was hurt by it. The fact is, you don't know the long term impact of this on young children and neither do I. Not allowing my kid to use one for a few years is hardly a hefty price to ensure her eyes develop properly. She doesn't even know a 3DS exists and shes got a dsi so she's not missing out.
This brings to mind a situation shortly after she was born, we were using this huge pain in the ass bottle that required you to purchase bags for it because of reports about BPA (a chemical in plastics that was originally designed to be an estrogen hormone). My in laws thought we were crazy and that it didnt matter because their kids used bottles with it. Then we had our second kid and he same people are saying, "make sure you don't get the ones with BPA, I saw it on 60 minutes!" Somehow they completely forgot the hyper critical attitude a few years before and now they're

ing geniuses. The chemical had been banned from baby products by the time they said that so their suggestion was completely irrelevant anyway. So this brings me back to the 3DS, "oh you're crazy, it's fine just let your kid use it!" The. What happens down the road if problems arise? The same people will say "those parents are so stupid, it's obvious a 4 year old shouldn't be using 3D!" I guaran-damn-tee you that will happen. The self righteous cant stand being wrong.
If I'm wrong, no harm is done. If they're wrong bad shit happens. No one wants to allow something that may hurt their kid and most people with a child under 6 wouldnt let their kid use the 3D if they knew about hese problems. Why does she need a 3DS exactly?[/QUOTE]
[quote name='itachiitachi']The American Optometric Association still cautions moderation in 3D use, but in a statement issued today says that there is no evidence that suggests viewing 3D in moderation would have any sort of negative effect in children or adults.
In fact, the AOA says that using 3D technology like the 3DS could help uncover undiagnosed vision problems vision problems that a screening would miss under normal testing conditions.
Keep up the poor trolling

.[/QUOTE]
Yep, this is what I was thinking of - I should have mentioned that. And you further proved my point by bringing up the epileptic siezure warnings. That applies to a
certain small segment of the population. Likewise, the 3D
might be detrimental for people with certain eye conditions (though as itachiitachi points out, it might actually help draw attention to some of these conditions so they can be treated)... So yeah, Blasterman, you are the one who is self-righteous in this thread. You've proven that from day one. Kind of ironic...
And besides, if you wanted to do what was best for your kid, why were you using bottles at all?

I've had 5 kids and never once was a bottle of any kind (BPA or not) involved. Though I do agree with you on BPA - we got rid of any BPA-infused sippy cups and such when that news first broke.
And no, I'm not trying to put you down - just making the point that you can
always be cautious about every little thing your kids do and playing the Nintendo 3DS (even in dreaded
3D mode) is pretty far down the list...
In any case, I 100% guarantee that Nintendo's warnings came from their lawyers in order to cover their asses. There's no way Nintendo did years of research to determine that kids under 7 (or whatever arbitrary number) shouldn't play a handheld in 3D.