Emmanuel Macron backtracks on video games after blaming them for French riots
Emmanuel Macron backtracks on video games after blaming them for French riots
After denouncing video games earlier this year as a cause for French teenagers rioting on the streets - Emmanuel Macron now says they are great.
Emmanuel Macron - who earlier this year blamed video games for fuelling street violence - has backtracked on his negative stance about gamers.
The French president in June denounced video games as a cause for youths rioting after the police shooting of a teenage boy in the Parisian suburb of Nanterre.
The death of 17-year-old Nahel Merzouk triggered nationwide protests and riots, which were shared and celebrated on social media networks, leading Mr Macron to accuse youths of playing "a considerable role" in the unrest.
"We sometimes have the feeling that some of them [rioters] are living in the streets of the video games that have intoxicated them," Mr Macron said at the time.
But at the weekend, he described gamers as "storytellers" and claimed video games were a form of art, sport and entertainment - and inspire young people to use their imagination and be creative.
"Video games are an integral part of France," he wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter.
"Video games offer opportunities for employment and the future, creating champions, but also engineers, developers, designers and creators. The sector inspires, makes people dream, makes them grow!"
Mr Macron said he had voiced his concerns in June "because video game codes had been used by offenders to trivialise violence on social networks".
"It is this violence that I condemn, not video games," he said, pledging to "accelerate" the sector.
"I have always considered that video games are an opportunity for France, for our youth and its future, for our jobs and our economy," he said.