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Un élan qui charge deux enfants…
Un grand-père inconscient sur l’autoroute…
Des grenades prêtes à exploser dans une maison abandonnée…

Et à chaque fois, une seule chose a fait la différence : un jeu vidéo.
Voici les histoires vraies où le gaming est devenu… une question de vie ou de mort.

🎯 Abonnez-vous pour ne rien manquer des prochains épisodes.
💬 Racontez-moi en commentaire : Et vous, un jeu vous a-t-il déjà sauvé la vie ?

📦 Concours du mois : https://gleam.io/4MWKz/gagne-une-copie-de-mafia-the-old-country-jplevrai

Minia : https://www.instagram.com/thib_j/
Vidéos IA ici : https://www.mediafire.com/folder/3ayk5voijulp9/Video_IA

#jeuxvideo #histoiresvraies #gaming #sauvetage #threadhorreur
Transcription
00:00It's 2017.
00:02Like almost every evening, Aiden Jackson, a 17-year-old British teenager,
00:06is online from his bedroom in Witness, England.
00:09He is chatting with Dia Alatora, an American friend he met through a multiplayer game.
00:14That evening, he doesn't really play.
00:17He chats on Discord while he browses the internet.
00:20Nothing extraordinary.
00:22And yet, something is wrong.
00:25After a few minutes, Aiden notices Dia's voice changing.
00:28She looks confused.
00:29His words become vague, jerky.
00:31Then she doesn't answer anymore.
00:33But she's still connected.
00:35No disconnections or lost pings.
00:37Just nothing more.
00:39Aiden insists, he calls her.
00:41He hears muffled noises, short breaths.
00:43And then he understands.
00:44He hesitates for a second.
00:45What if it was a false alarm?
00:47What if he's wrong?
00:48But he has no time to doubt.
00:50Aiden does what almost no one would think of doing at 17.
00:53He Googles the emergency number for Dia, Texas City.
00:56He managed to contact the local police station from England.
01:00And he explains everything.
01:02He is online with a friend.
01:03She lives at this address.
01:04She is probably in medical distress.
01:06The police are a little surprised.
01:08But they still take his message seriously.
01:10A few minutes later, help arrived at Dia's house.
01:13Before the stunned eyes of her parents, who were unaware that she was ill.
01:16He finds her in her room, having an epileptic seizure.
01:19Thanks to the early warning, it is taken care of in time.
01:22And the crazy thing is, without that game, without that unlikely connection between two teenagers on the internet,
01:27Dia might not be here today.
01:33And there are many cases like this on the Internet.
01:35One that really struck me was of a child walking with his little sister in a forest in Norway.
01:402007, Hans and his little sister go to school.
01:42As they were already late, the 12-year-old boy decided with his sister to go through the forest
01:46and avoid the village to arrive faster.
01:48They enter the forest, continue walking,
01:50and after a few minutes they should have saved a considerable amount of time to arrive on time.
01:54Except Hans notices something coming in front of them.
01:57And at that moment, he thinks he has a deer or a bambi.
02:00Nothing normal in a forest.
02:02Except that this animal is excessively large.
02:04He understands that it is an elk that is in front of him.
02:06And in fact, he quickly makes the connection with an animal that has already been terrorizing the Latvika region for some time.
02:11It's this momentum in fact.
02:12The moose, visibly not very happy, charges the children who run in different directions.
02:16So at that moment, Hans goes one way and his little sister the other.
02:19He is 12 years old but he knows he won't be able to survive against such a big beast.
02:23I mean, look at the size difference.
02:24Notice how fast a moose runs.
02:26The moose chases the little girl.
02:27But Hans has a flash of gynes.
02:29Use a skill from your World of Warcraft character.
02:32The provocation.
02:32He's flailing around trying to get the moose to charge towards him and leave his little sister alone.
02:37And you know what?
02:38It works well.
02:39A little too good even.
02:40The moose reaches the little boy who senses that the animal is right behind him.
02:44Before getting hit in the back.
02:45Which propels him a few meters further.
02:47Luckily, it was his backpack that took the impact and absorbed most of the damage.
02:50He is on the ground.
02:51The momentum is getting closer.
02:52He has no more solution.
02:54Then an idea came to me.
02:56Feign death.
02:57He lies down.
02:57Motionless.
02:58Barely breathe and wait.
03:00It will be the longest 30 seconds of his life.
03:02He remains on the ground, watching the elk leave, having won the battle for territory.
03:06And once far enough away, Hans gets up and runs out of the forest to join his sister who was waiting for him there.
03:11That day, it was a video game that made all the difference.
03:14Because in addition to saving his life, he saved his little sister's too.
03:17All this thanks to World of Warcraft skills.
03:20According to some reports, the elk was shot by authorities because it posed a danger to the local population.
03:25Not a very happy ending for this momentum.
03:28Ok, if you like this kind of story, let me know by subscribing, it supports me enormously and it allows me to know which format you like the most on the channel.
03:35Oh, and don't forget the contest at the end of the video too.
03:37While the Grand Theft Auto series, and more specifically GTA V, is known for being violent, it has also allowed some players to have extraordinary reflexes.
03:45Well, you know, GTA is a Peggy 18 game.
03:48That is to say, you must be 18 years old to play it.
03:50A rule that no one really respects.
03:53Me first.
03:53And that may have been what saved Charlie Cullin's life.
03:55This young boy is from Slane, County Metz, Ireland.
03:59It's not very important but it's a small region.
04:01So when he has to travel, rather than waiting a long time on the bus, his grandfather takes him by car.
04:04So that day, Charlie drives home and his grandfather drives.
04:08The situation is completely normal so far; they are on the highway they usually take when they travel this same route.
04:12Except that Finn, the grandfather, feels unwell and loses consciousness.
04:16At this point, they are still on the highway, traveling at nearly 120 km/h.
04:21Charlie, who is a passenger since he is only 12 years old, remember, immediately understands what is happening.
04:25If he does nothing, the car will drive straight into the scenery.
04:28And at that speed, it's certain death.
04:30So the young boy grabs the wheel, manages to keep control of the vehicle,
04:34slaloms between other cars and looks for a way to slow down.
04:37Where do these people actually come from? Can someone explain it to me or not?
04:40He remains calm and steers the vehicle towards the guardrail.
04:43To reduce the speed, he manages to exit the highway.
04:46Not far from Slane Castle, the vehicle stopped.
04:48Charlie takes Grandpa out of the car and carries him to his house which is about 50 meters away,
04:52where he finds his grandmother who immediately calls an ambulance.
04:55And so everyone gets out safe and sound.
04:57Later questioned by the Irish press, the boy said he had never driven.
05:01nor have been involved in an accident before.
05:02At the same time, in 12 years, I play Dofus.
05:06He claims that it was his GTA V sessions that taught him how to react in an emergency.
05:09And to maneuver a vehicle in an extreme situation.
05:12In fact, he just replicated what he usually did in the game to avoid drama.
05:15And so on that day, an 11-year-old child avoided tragedy.
05:18And it wasn't thanks to a driving lesson.
05:20It's thanks to a game, Kegi 18.
05:22You're not allowed to play it normally, man.
05:23I also saw this testimony from a redditor who says that GTA saved his life.
05:26Hugo has had his license for about 3 months.
05:28So still in the running-in phase, as they say, not totally comfortable behind the wheel.
05:31He's in the car, ready to get back on the highway and head home.
05:34Which joins the motorway slip road coming from a bridge.
05:36The problem is that it comes a little too quickly.
05:39It spins too much, way too much.
05:40And so the car goes sideways.
05:42The car skids.
05:43He hears the squeal of tires.
05:45The steering wheel is shaking.
05:46And in front of him, emptiness.
05:48I would have already pissed myself off.
05:49But after that, well, everyone has their own way.
05:50How to prevent the car from going over the ravant?
05:52You have to countersteer gently, release the accelerator, which will straighten the car.
05:57It might sound very simple when you say it like that, but having the reflex to do it is something else.
06:01Hugo managed to have this reflex.
06:03Because in fact, he's used to doing it.
06:05And how is he used to doing that?
06:06Well, quite simply, by doing it on your favorite game.
06:08He has thousands of hours on GTA.
06:10And if he hadn't spent his time dodging cops, getting out of impossible skids, keeping his cool,
06:15he wouldn't have known how to handle it.
06:17And would probably have met a tragic end.
06:19Okay, we'll stick with Peggy 18 games.
06:21Counter-Strike is one of the most popular multiplayer shooter games.
06:24Players take on the role of terrorists or counter-terrorists.
06:27And you will see why CSGO is clearly superior to Valorant.
06:30Counter-Strike weapons are faithful reproductions of real life.
06:33And that allowed José Darwin Garciano, a 12-year-old boy, to save his friends.
06:36So he and his friends were playing outside, looking for scrap metal.
06:40We said we don't judge people's occupations, okay?
06:42They find an abandoned house on their way, in Manduai City, Philippines.
06:45And while searching this house, they hear a rattle, coming from a cookie tin.
06:49They do what any boy their age would do.
06:51They search the box and start playing with what's inside.
06:54Except Jose wasn't with them, he was a little further away.
06:56So he turns around and sees his two friends playing with grenades.
06:59He shouts at them to stop immediately and leave the area.
07:01Something his friends will do.
07:02He will notify his parents when he gets home and later the SWAT will be notified to go and secure the explosives.
07:07One of the police officers will say that the children were very lucky.
07:09The grenades could have exploded at any moment.
07:12When he is interviewed, Jose will say this.
07:14I knew it was going to explode because I saw it in the game Counter-Strike.
07:18The story made the front page of the Cebu Daily News, a local newspaper, and the 12-year-old boy was declared a hero.
07:23His quick reaction and knowledge gained from a video game saved 3 lives.
07:29Let's step away from Peggy 18 games and enter the wonderful world of mobile gaming.
07:33And there I can already hear some people saying to me
07:35But JP, how can we save lives with a mobile game?
07:39It makes no sense, it's a casino, a scam.
07:42I'm stuck at level 4752 on Candy Crush, this is a cry for help.
07:46Well, we'll have to turn to the most hyped game of 2016, Pokémon Go.
07:52Everyone has heard of Pokémon Go.
07:54The mobile game that allowed you to catch Pokémon in real life with your phone.
07:58A revolution in the industry.
08:00In addition to having contributed to improving the physical condition of certain players
08:03and for helping others understand that life is also an RPG,
08:06Pokémon Go has helped save animals, specifically abandoned animals.
08:10One of the most famous rescues took place in Texas, USA.
08:13On a beautiful summer day, two friends, Sarah Perez and Matthew Teague, are walking around playing Pokémon Go.
08:18They visit a park in south Houston.
08:20While tracking down some rare specimens, they suddenly notice an abandoned cage.
08:24This is what Sarah wrote on Facebook.
08:25We saw a strange box on the ground.
08:27And inside that box, there was a cage.
08:30And in the cage, hamsters abandoned in the full sun.
08:33No water, just birdseed.
08:35They were close to death.
08:37In total, 27 animals were discovered in the cage.
08:4020 hamsters, 7 little mice.
08:42And in fact, everything suggests that they were abandoned voluntarily.
08:45The Pokémon trainer duo immediately takes the cage to Sarah's house,
08:48giving them food and drink.
08:50Then they contact the SPCA, an animal protection association.
08:53Each little survivor then receives a name inspired by a Pokémon.
08:56That's beautiful.
08:57I like that.
08:58I really like this anecdote.
09:00In an interview, Sarah will confide...
09:01Without this game, I would never have walked this far.
09:04And this is not an isolated case.
09:05There are plenty of Pokémon Go players who have rescued plenty of abandoned animals.
09:08A player saved three abandoned castles.
09:10Another found a dying puppy.
09:12Some players even helped bats.
09:14Wow.
09:14Pokémon Go has helped save countless endangered animals.
09:17And for that alone, congratulations to the players.
09:19As well as the studio behind the game.
09:20Okay, we've seen some very famous games.
09:22But sometimes we also have games that nobody knows about.
09:24And what you know, America's Army.
09:27A shooting game released in 2002 that was made by the US military.
09:30It's in the name.
09:30No, it's in the name.
09:32The primary purpose is not only entertainment, but also a recruitment and training tool.
09:36So unlike classic FPS games like Call of Duty and Battlefield, America's Army focuses on military realism.
09:42No respawn, importance of cover fire, hierarchy.
09:45Team missions, rescue, area security, escort, mandatory training in the game to access certain role missions.
09:53Example, combat medic.
09:54Well, first you have to go through virtual training, just like in a real military camp.
09:57All this follows the context of September 11, 2001.
10:00The game is there both to motivate new commitments and to educate the public about the complexity and responsibility of military operations.
10:06Which could have been of great use to Paxton Galvanek.
10:10This young man was able to save two people from a terrible road accident.
10:12And that, without any medical training.
10:15In fact, in the game America's Army, there are training modules aimed at mastering and controlling hemorrhage.
10:22Thanks to this, he was able to apply it in real life, which allowed the two people to be kept alive while waiting for help.
10:27Without this heroic act, the two accident victims would probably have been dead by the time an ambulance arrived.
10:31So well, I don't have a stadium.
10:34Who ever thought that sometimes our online friends are more present than those we know in real life?
10:38Well, for Evil Razer, it is.
10:40This Ukrainian gamer spends most of his gaming time playing Team Fortress 2 with friends online.
10:45Friends he has never seen in real life, since he does not live in Ukraine.
10:48One day, a military base near his apartment is attacked.
10:51Panicked, Razer immediately fled his home.
10:54He then tries to contact friends of his whom he knows personally and who live not far from his home.
10:58Obviously, classic, he can't reach anyone.
11:00So he does something that few people would have thought of.
11:03He opens Steam, sends a message to his Team Fortress 2 teammates explaining the situation.
11:06To his surprise, they all help him.
11:09Some offer food, others a roof over their heads, until they can find asylum in another country.
11:14Razer concludes his testimony with a simple but powerful piece of advice.
11:17Never take your friends, whether real or online, for granted.
11:20Well, Evil Razer was lucky that he was able to escape his apartment in time.
11:24Now imagine that you are physically unable to move in such a situation.
11:29It's complicated, isn't it?
11:29Bob Chambers was a 51-year-old man with muscular dystrophy, a disease that severely limits mobility.
11:34Needless to say, when you have this disease, there aren't a thousand possible activities.
11:38He spends a lot of time playing Evony, a multiplayer game, and his wife doesn't like that very much.
11:44One day, while she is away and Bob is playing Evony, he realizes that there is a problem at home.
11:49His house catches fire, what.
11:50There are flames everywhere.
11:51He can't reach his phone, leave the building, or even shout to the neighbors for help.
11:56So he does the only thing he can still do.
11:58He connects to the chat of the Evony game he is playing and sends a distress message.
12:03My house is on fire, I can't get out.
12:05Players in Texas and Indiana see his message and react immediately.
12:10They called the police and the fire department, who arrived and managed to save Bob.
12:13His wife, who was not at home at the time, had always hated the time he spent on this online game.
12:18But after this event, knowing that his virtual relationships helped save his life and their home,
12:23She completely changed her mind.
12:24Anyway, luckily Bob wasn't playing League of Legends.
12:27Because no one would have helped him, I think.
12:29As we have just seen, these people were able to save lives thanks to video games that are made to be fun.
12:34These are entertainment products.
12:36But there is also the opposite.
12:38Video games that are made to help people, whether in first aid situations,
12:42or even medical research.
12:44One of the most famous and cute in this style is Sea Hero Quest.
12:47Developed in 2016 by researchers from CNRS, University College London and University of East Anglia,
12:54This is a spatial orientation game for smartphones and tablets.
12:57which aims to collect data on the spatial navigation of these players
13:00with the aim of advancing research into Alzheimer's disease.
13:03It also exists in virtual reality for better immersion.
13:05The player plays the captain of a boat and must memorize,
13:08then reproduce, routes in three-dimensional aquatic labyrinths,
13:12passing through different points in a specific order and within a limited time.
13:15The levels become more difficult as you play.
13:17The results of each game as well as demographic information
13:20are then transmitted to researchers.
13:22Ok but how does it actually work?
13:24Spatial orientation, being one of the first cognitive functions affected by the disease,
13:28the game allows you to spot possible signs of decline
13:31even before the onset of clinical symptoms.
13:33Which I find incredible.
13:35An analysis conducted on more than 27,000 players
13:37showed that those with an increased genetic risk of Alzheimer's,
13:40carriers of the APOE-E4 allele,
13:43had more difficulty navigating the game effectively,
13:46even without the apparent symptoms.
13:47Obviously, when it comes to gaming, gamers are there.
13:50Over 4 million players worldwide have participated.
13:55We feel there a database of an unprecedented scale
13:57for scientific, behavioral and cognitive research.
14:00Sub-game performances allowed exploring navigation differences
14:02between the sexes according to the place of childhood,
14:05city, countryside,
14:06or the culture of a country revealing, for example,
14:09that growing up in the city would reduce one's sense of direction in adulthood
14:12in some cultures,
14:13while it is not universal.
14:14Now there are also games that are aimed directly
14:16to people affected by certain illnesses or disorders.
14:19So I present to you the first game
14:21prescribed as a medicine,
14:23Endeavor Rx.
14:24The first therapeutic video game to receive approval
14:26of the FDA, Food and Drug Administration,
14:28in the United States for the treatment of attention deficit disorder
14:32with or without hyperactivity,
14:34so ADHD, I think you know,
14:36in children aged 8 to 12.
14:38The child controls a character moving on a circuit
14:40having to avoid obstacles and collect objects
14:43with adaptive difficulty.
14:45But be careful, there is a given playing time
14:47over a certain period of time, like a drug.
14:49This is not a game you're going to spend 2-3 hours on.
14:51to betray a platinum.
14:52None of that here.
14:53The game is designed to be played for about 25 minutes a day,
14:565 days a week,
14:57for a month,
14:58in order to achieve notable effects on symptoms of inattention.
15:01And the results are amazing.
15:03Several studies conducted with more than 600 children over 7 years
15:06showed that after 4 weeks of treatment,
15:08about a third of the children no longer presented
15:10attention deficit measurable on objective tests,
15:13like the TOVA.
15:14Nearly half of parents noticed
15:15a significant improvement in daily difficulties
15:18attention from their children.
15:20And it is important to remember,
15:20but Endeavor Rx is not intended to replace
15:22standard treatments.
15:23It is a complement to therapy, medication
15:26or educational program.
15:27And besides, this is also the case
15:28for Remission.
15:30Remission, Remission, do you have it?
15:31Intended primarily for teenagers
15:33and young adults with cancer,
15:35This video game aims to strengthen
15:36their understanding of the disease,
15:38of the treatment process
15:39and to promote compliance with therapies,
15:41including chemotherapy.
15:43The player embodies Roxy,
15:44a nano-robot that travels inside the body
15:46of fictitious patients
15:47to fight cancer cells,
15:49but also bacterial infections
15:50and side effects associated with treatment.
15:52We know how much a patient's mental health
15:54will play on his recovery,
15:56with a more playful and informative approach
15:58of what it serves.
15:59Some patients have better adhered to their medical treatment
16:00and developed a more positive perception
16:02of their ability to cope with the disease.
16:04Other research also highlights
16:05that the game contributes to a better quality of life,
16:07notably by reducing perceived fatigue
16:09in adolescents in treatment.
16:11These games are mainly made
16:12to help sick people
16:13or who need follow-up treatment.
16:15So if I start playing it,
16:16it won't really have an impact on me
16:18because I am not concerned
16:20by the same problems that the game aims at.
16:21On the other hand, one of the games I could totally play,
16:24and you too, by the way,
16:25would be Foldit.
16:25Well, some people already see what it is, I think.
16:27I will simplify my words as much as possible,
16:29but Foldit is an experimental video game
16:31launched in 2008
16:32aimed at advancing research in biology
16:34and more precisely understanding
16:36of protein folding.
16:37It's a serious game.
16:39Players virtually manipulate proteins
16:40in order to predict their three-dimensional shape,
16:42a crucial question in biology and medicine.
16:44And no, it has nothing to do with it.
16:46with the movements of the attack on titans.
16:47It has nothing to do with it.
16:48Four important pieces of information about how the game works.
16:50Proteins appear as 3D puzzles to be solved.
16:53The player modifies their structure
16:54in order to find an optimal folding
16:56respecting certain chemical constraints.
16:58With each manipulation,
16:59The game calculates a score based on the energy of the molecule.
17:02The lower it is, the higher the score.
17:04Foldit offers tutorials
17:05to learn to master protein manipulation tools.
17:08I see some coming
17:09But JP, why don't we leave the computer?
17:11see AI manipulate proteins for us?
17:13Could he make billions of structures in seconds?
17:16Well, not really.
17:17Because it doesn't work like that.
17:18Unless you have a quantum computer,
17:20forget about billions of structures per second.
17:22For AI, in addition to costing very, very, very expensive,
17:25it will follow an often rational pattern.
17:27What we want to avoid here.
17:28Except that to find the right form of protein,
17:30you have to make weird structures.
17:33Only a human brain could achieve this result.
17:34And you know what?
17:35In 2011, Foldit players solved in 3 weeks
17:38a riddle more than 10 years old,
17:40finding the 3D structure of a protasis,
17:42of a retrovirus,
17:43a key step against the spread of AIDS.
17:45So the super computer that was needed to help scientists
17:48was none other than several human brains
17:50united collectively for the same cause.
17:52Because even if you don't know anything about it,
17:54by manipulating the protein in any way,
17:56you may discover a stable structure
17:57which will be more effective than that of a professional.
18:00Models developed by players
18:01were found to be 18 times more efficient
18:03than those produced by researchers
18:05having worked on the same subject for 2 years.
18:07So the importance of the collective is essential.
18:10So yeah, it's not as spectacular
18:11than a kid jumping on the steering wheel of a car
18:13at 120 km per hour.
18:15But the bottom line is that we can help
18:16another human being through a game
18:18whether it's made for that or not.
18:20We would skip over the more classic stories
18:21but which are just as impressive
18:23of people who have come out of depression
18:25through video games.
18:26I even saw someone quit smoking
18:27to be able to live longer
18:29and be able to play GTA VI.
18:30Wow, the guy's determination.
18:32And in a way,
18:33Video games can already save us
18:34before saving the others.
18:35Certain characters or stories leave a mark on us
18:37and make us put into perspective the people we are.
18:40Our behavior towards others,
18:42how we think.
18:43Lots of games bring heavy topics
18:44like gray or rhymes
18:45who talk about death and mourning
18:47and who can help us overcome these stages.
18:49But if playing a video game allows you to escape
18:51even if only for a moment,
18:53so do it!
18:55This month's contest is in the description.
18:58Thank you very much for watching.
19:00I hope you like this new format.
19:02A little bit of thread, a little bit of storytelling.
19:05Well, you tell me.
19:06I really enjoyed making it.
19:07And so listen,
19:08we'll see you next time.
19:09This is the kit.
19:09Subtitling Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
19:11Subtitling Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
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