Just 10 MINUTES playing an internet ‘makeover’ game makes schoolgirls want a slimmer figure, alarming study reveals


  • Primary school children desired slimmer figure immediately after playing 
  • Kids selected body shape which matched their own and one they desired
  • Game is a ‘blatant message’ to change their appearance say researchers
  • Increasing global concern surrounding girls growing up too quickly

Stephen Matthews For Mailonline

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Playing an internet game for just 10 minutes made young girls immediately desire a slimmer figure, researchers have found.

Schoolgirls recorded lower body satisfaction after playing a game where female characters are given a makeover. 

Youngsters played Dream Date Dress Up, one of several appearance-focused games targeted at girls hosted on the Friv.com website.

A group of 40 eight and nine-year-olds from the south-west of England played the game, which sees players changing a female characters appearance to make her more attractive to her date. 

Another 40 played Penguin Diner, a game from the same website which is not based on appearance.

The school children were then asked to select the silhouette of a body shape which they believed represented their own, and the one they most desired. 

The Dream Date Dress Up game was used in a study which revealed just 10 minutes of playing was enough to lower body satisfaction among young girls

Both groups recorded a preference for a slimmer figure but children who had played Dream Date Dress Up registered a ‘significantly’ greater preference than those who had played Penguin Diner.

The research will be unveiled at Appearance Matters, a conference on body image and disfigurement in London later this month.

Dr Amy Slater, a senior research fellow at the University of the West of England in Bristol, will tell the conference she undertook the experimental research on internet games to gauge their impact on children’s body satisfaction and career aspirations.

Dr Slater, who worked on the study with colleagues Emma Halliwell and Hannah Jarman, said the findings were cause for concern.

She said: ‘This is concerning because we know girls who have body dissatisfaction at a young age are more likely to experience ongoing concerns when they grow up.

‘Body dissatisfaction is known to be a risk factor for lowered self-esteem, disordered eating and depression.

‘A game like that is sending a fairly blatant message for young girls that they need to change their appearance in order to be appealing to a boy and that you need to focus on your appearance to be attractive to the opposite sex.

‘Young girls of six, seven, eight, nine and 10 are the target audience for this game. Do they need to even be thinking about how they would prepare to go on a date, and how they can make themselves look cute?

‘This is not a helpful message for young girls to be focusing on.

She added: ‘Even if they have not played this type of game, many young girls may be exposed to similar messages through magazines, advertising, clothing and toys.’

‘A game like that is sending a fairly blatant message for young girls that they need to change their appearance in order to be appealing to a boy,’ says lead researcher Dr Amy Slater

In 2014, Ofcom highlighted children were increasingly being attracted to websites which contain a large number of mini games.

Other appearance-related games on the site include Fashion Week Dress Up, Pin-up Facial Beauty and Selena’s Date Rush.

Dr Slater chose to study the impact of internet games because their effect on young players had not been widely researched. 

It follows widespread public and political concern about girls growing up too quickly.

She said: ‘It’s useful for parents to be aware of the types of messages children are being exposed to.

‘Lots of parents may not realise these messages are prevalent in game websites like this. 

‘It would also be useful to see more societal level changes, with improved regulation, and ideally game-makers creating games which are appealing to young girls without containing these types of messages.

‘We would welcome a discussion with the creators of these games.’ 

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