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Drift
Reality > South Korea >
The PC Bang
Earlier
that day I had asked Jake if there was any way I could get access
to the internet, in order to send an e-mail back to my family,
telling them that I had arrived safely. So after we left the school
that evening, we headed towards the Star PC-Bang. This was my
first venture into the world of Korean PC-Bang culture, a strange
sort of phenomenon that snatched me into its grip, condemning
me to countless hours of Internet chat, video games, and mindless
web surfing.
The
PC Bang in Korea is a sort of technology age church, in which
tens of thousands of young Koreans indulge in all manners of online
interactions. The generic PC-Bang is a single room equipped with
an average of about twenty computers, a coffee vending machine,
a snack bar stocked with Ramyen and a Korean version of Slim-jims
that tastes like fish.
Behind
the front counter is a selection of about 10-20 video games that
the PC-Bang patron can choose from, which is really ornamental
in nature, seeing as how Koreans only play three computer games:
Warcraft, Diablo 2, and Lineage. There are also a wide variety
of internet-based games that Koreans play such as Fortress (which
Koreans pronounce "Portress") and Tetris.
In the United States, there is an image of the stereotypical video
game aficionado as being a teenage male with acne, who really
has no alternative but to play video games. In Korea, this image
is non-existent. Although the majority of PC-Bang fanatics are
males, there is normally a sizeable minority of females present
at any given time. With regard to age, the youngest patrons are
about five years old and the oldest tend to be in their mid to
late twenties.
We
walked into the Star PC-Bang and a young Korean man with a genuine
smile greeted us. Blake told me that his name was "Pak-chal,"
but somehow I heard "Puckchuck," and this was what I
ended up calling him for several months.
There
were about five or six people in the PC-Bang, all smoking cigarettes
as they clicked away to their heart's content. There was a Caucasian
male seated near us and Blake approached him and laid his hand
on the man's shoulder. The man exclaimed and turned around in
surprise.
He
had wild blue eyes, a brown pony tail, and an overbite that reminded
me of how a shark's mouth looks when examined from underneath.
"Oh
man, you scared me," he said. "You got to watch it,
it's a good thing I caught myself because half the time I would
have busted the person by now. Don't ever come up from behind
me like that again."
This
was Bill. He was a thirty year old from Manhattan who had taught
at my Institute for six months before quitting and returning home.
After realizing that he didn't really have a whole lot going for
him at home, he returned to Korea and was supporting himself by
teaching private lessons. He lived in a small one-room apartment
near the airport, which he described as being roughly the size
of a closet.
As
I grew to know Bill, I became aware that he had two main hobbies:
telling crazy stories and playing video games for obscenely large
amounts of time. He also happened to be a passionately loyal friend
and probably would have taken a bullet for Jake if presented with
the opportunity.
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