Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Would you divorced your husband or wife?

if you find out that he or she already married online

read this article

do you think the wife is overreacting with this one

i think she is its only a game its not like he is cheating on her

'Second Life' ends couples' first marriage

16 hours ago



LONDON (AFP) — A woman is to divorce her husband after discovering he was having a virtual affair within the online game "Second Life," newspapers reported Friday.



Amy Taylor, 28, met her husband David Pollard within the game in May 2003, and six months later, she moved into his home in Cornwall.



The couple married in July 2005, while their "Second Life" avatars Dave Barmy and Laura Skye -- younger, slimmer versions of their real-life selves -- also held an online ceremony for their virtual friends.



After a rare break from the computer, however, Taylor returned to find her 40-year-old husband in an intimate, albeit virtual, position with an online prostitute within "Second Life", which she said was the "ultimate betrayal".



"I was so hurt," she was quoted as saying in The Times, adding that theirs was a "very serious marriage".



"I just couldn't believe what he'd done. It's cheating as far as I'm concerned, but he didn't see it as a problem and couldn't see why I was so upset.



"He said I was just making a big fuss and tried to make out it was my fault for not giving him enough attention."



Second Life is an online role-playing game with more than 15 million users, in which players can create virtual avatars and interact with other gamers, or the environment.



The game has its own virtual economy, in which online currency can be exchanged for real-world US dollars, and several major businesses have set up "branches" within the game, while others operate entirely within it.



According to the Daily Telegraph, Taylor claims that Pollard is now engaged to the woman he was having an online tryst with, despite never having met her.



She has, meanwhile, found a new love, through fantasy online role-playing game "World of Warcraft".

Would you divorced your husband or wife?
now that woman needs serious help
she is overreacting. come on cheating because he is playing on a game where people get marriedWould you divorced your husband or wife?
LOL! What a wanker!" He cheated on me virtually boo hoo!"

He's a man sweetheart!
People who have "online" lives, should find a more productive hobby. Would you divorced your husband or wife?
now that is funny. the wife is well and truly overreacting
i say that they both need to get a life.

i do think that in this situation that what he did was wrong though.
i just got one thing to say, this is one strange love Triangle, and if my future wife were like that guy then I would get seriously counseling
I guess some people take **** too seriously.
she needs to get life of her own
wth?!? Ya, I think she's over reacting. I mean, it's virtual, as in, not REAL, but it is awkward/weird to be engaged to someone online...
She justified in being upset, as they BOTH took their 'alter egos' on the site very seriously. They met and got married on that site -- AND IN REAL LIFE:



"Amy Taylor, 28, met her husband David Pollard within the game in May 2003, and six months later, she moved into his home in Cornwall."



That's where THEY MET. That's like meeting on a dating site and then your husband still cruises the site after your married....(well, maybe not, more like meeting on a cartoon and him still playing the part of that French skunk Pipi Le Peau)



The husband even proves that HE TOO took his "affair" seriously when he replies to the wife by saying

" it was her fault for not giving him enough attention."

Which makes them BOTH wackos!!!!!

But he was the cheating wacko!



lol

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