  On-line Identity -- Your “Avatar” The on-line or virtual representation of you. This should be you, with a reasonable and limited amount of anonymity. However, many MMORPG and other on-line gamers choose an “avatar” (image of a character, real or fantasy) to represent themselves. This may be tailored to their on-line world, character’s class and race, guild, or even to a specific attitude or attribute they wish to personify.
Many gamers have even gone as far as to create a fictitious story or background for some origins of their on-line life. Online game such as Ragnarok is an example of online game worshipping Satan. The game is a very easy game with unlimited levels, targetted mainly to teenagers with low esteem and inferiority complex who are incapale of coping with real life issues. An Anonymous Means by which to Escape Everyone has a few dreams or fantasies about what they would like to do with their lives, or a fictional character’s life they would like to experience. It’s just human to have even a little bit of imagination. But that is where it stays. In our thoughts, in our dreams, and in games we create and play, our imagination is a tool of creativity and desires. However, Imagination left unchecked or unbalanced between fantasy and real life is sure to leave people stranded in limbo, gamer or not.
Your on-line identity is the anchor of your imagination; therefore it is something that centers your virtual life and either grounds it with the real world or lets it fly untamed. For on-line gamers or on-line community members who maintain a good balance between their virtual and real lives, on-line identity may not be an issue. However, for those with compulsive or addictive on-line habits, small changes or differences in their on-line identities may help them fight their addiction. Addicted gamers will often spend as much time as possible within the game, neglecting real world responsibilities and requirements. Their fictitious and possibly anonymous on-line identity does nothing to remind them of the real world, only helping to keep them locked into the game’s fantasy environment. We don’t want any of our visitors to misunderstand our intentions or come to a premature conclusions that we’re an anti-gaming organization. Most of us have left our on-line games behind, but that doesn’t mean we expect everyone else to do the same. Some of us still play other games, even ones that are considered to be “on-line”. However, your identity within an on-line game or community will act as a crutch for your addiction. We hope the information we provided helps you realize the need to change your on-line identity to reflect the “real” you.
This is one of the last steps your webmaster completed, to remove his fictitious avatar and replace it and his on-line identity with his real pic. He still uses his screen name for a mild bit of anonymity, but his character’s fantasy past and story are, well, history (no pun intended). If you are in the middle of changing your on-line avatar or fantasy profile, consider a possibility other than some fictitious character. It is such a simple, yet profound awakening to use your own pic as your on-line identity. If you can’t take a pic of yourself, as a friend to help.
May be you’ll have problems getting that pic into a digital form? Many print shops, like Kinko’s, will help you scan your image into a computer and save it on a floppy disk. If it still seems too daunting or you’re just not ready to give up your anonymity, then simply take down your old fictitious avatar, sig, or character. Start with just text about you as a real person, or a brief description of your life and your direction.
No need to give all of your personal life’s details, just things you’re proud of, such as opinions, stances, and ideals. Why must your on-line identity be in the form of something else or someone else you admire or find interesting? Who said you have to be so reclusive and secretive in your on-line profile? There are no rules here, only misconceptions because so many other addicted on-line gamers make fictitious on-line identities. Be proud of who you are! 
