A young child has failed in his 1st-year pre-university exam after he wrote only on how to play PUBG game in his Economics answer sheet. Before the boy had secured distinction in his SSLC examination last year but got addicted to the online game, PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds he dropped the track. I was studious but got drawn towards PUBG because it was entertaining, and soon got addicted to it. Sometimes I even bunked classes to play the game and sat at the nearby garden, he said to Plugged Technology. I got mad with myself and wrote on How to Play PUBG in my answer sheet.
Now my parents have taken the mobile away, but the pictures of the game continue to linger in my thoughts. I realize how dangerous the game is, he further added. Normally students who don't know the answers write movie songs or famous movie dialogues. However, this boy has composed all on the game, starting from steps to download it and how to play it. He appears to have great mastery over the game. I brought the problem into the principal's notice, and we summoned his parents and educated them about their son's addiction.
In the meantime, Varun now has a possibility to appear at the exam scheduled to take place in June. In the latest case, a teenager withdrew money from his father's banking account to buy a PUBG game controller in addition to weapons to the online game, the Jalandhar police said on Saturday. The matter came to light following the father filed a police complaint on January 20, citing that about Rs 50,000 has been withdrawn from his bank account. A week ago, different cities in Gujarat including Surat, Rajkot and also a bunch of districts had banned the game by releasing an ad. Police officers were very stern about the ban and had issued statements that the problem wouldn't be taken broadly. A circular letter to prohibit PUBG Mobile was also delivered to a number of principal education officers from the district to jointly make an attempt to decrease the number of incidents arising from the game dependency. Even the Chairperson of Gujarat Child rights body has sent a circular to the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights of all states to help curb the negative impacts of the game.

