TED Talks Daily - How video games can power up your parenting | Hannah Boquet
Episode Date: September 17, 2025Parenting an eye-rolling teenager glued to a gaming system is not a simple feat, but what if you could turn screen time into an opportunity for connection? Hannah Boquet shares how she decided to play... video games with her kids and discovered the power of esports to foster trust, communication and essential life skills. Dive deeper into how you can strengthen family bonds, support your child’s development — and maybe even be considered “cool” by your kid.Interested in learning more about upcoming TED events? Follow these links:TEDNext: ted.com/futureyouTEDSports: ted.com/sportsTEDAI Vienna: ted.com/ai-viennaTEDAI San Francisco: ted.com/ai-sf Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
Elise Hugh. Video games and kids. It's a complicated subject and I imagine just about everyone has an
opinion, especially parents. But what happens when a parent decides to step into the world of
video games to understand their kids instead of begging them to get offline? In this talk,
e-sports competitor Hannah Boquet shares how she found connection with her kids through playing
esports and how video games can actually be a game changer for families.
Before I get started, I just want a quick show of hands.
Who here has teens or preteen children?
Okay, cool.
That's a lot of you.
I just want to know, has the experience been for you the same as it's been for me?
And by that, I mean very connective.
The communication is always very clear.
There's never any conflict.
Definitely no sneakiness.
Same? Same? Okay, great. Good, good, good. I'm glad we can start all on the same page.
But it's wild, isn't it? How quickly our children are growing? I began thinking a little while
ago, how do I find a way to stay connected with my children when they're in this stage?
When they were little, they would climb up onto my lap and ask me to sing them lullivis and read them
stories. And now I feel the time that we have together just slipping through my fingers.
My kids are digital native youth, and that means the entire time they've been around,
so have video games and smartphones and the Internet and all of the technology.
So I've been watching my kids play video games for a while now,
but I had no interest myself until I had this genius idea.
I wondered, what if, instead of trying to pull my kids into my world with me,
what would it be like if I stepped into their world with them?
I mean, back at the day, I was pretty good at Diddy Kong racing.
So, like, how hard can it be?
Picture this.
I'm sitting at my house with my headset on, with my PC in front of me,
and my kids are over at their dad's house.
My oldest, who are then 10 and 12,
are there with their headsets on and their devices.
And we all dive in to the wonderful,
magic, mysterious world of Fortnite.
Immediately, my kids are off,
racking up points, opening treasure chests.
I literally don't know what they're doing
because I am right where I landed, spinning in a circle,
don't even know how to open a door
or open a treasure chest or move on to anything.
And pretty soon, I have to let my kids know,
I've been shot and I'm down.
Immediately, my 12-year-old said,
it's okay, hold on, mom.
And this kid comes running towards me, building a structure out of literally nothing
and holding his hand over me to heal me.
That was kind of cool.
I didn't know you could heal people.
My middle son, if you have a middle son, you can probably relate with this,
he comes crashing a semi-truck through the wall his brother just made,
hops out in a full-body banana costume, and lays his hand over me to heal me.
after the exasperated sigh of why do I have to.
That was the point where I could have quit,
where I could have said, I'm terrible at video games,
this is not for me, but I didn't quit.
I didn't quit because we were laughing so hard.
I was laughing at the absolute absurdity of this entire situation,
and I suspect they might have been laughing at how completely terrible
I was at video games.
But at that point, they decided
that they would stick closer to me
and teach me how to play this game.
But I didn't just learn about the game.
I learned about them.
I learned about the connections that they make together
and the way they communicate
while they're playing these games.
And maybe, the most importantly,
I learned this is the connection
that I've been craving as well.
I feel like we played and connected in a way
that not a lot of teens and parents get to connect,
because we connected through play.
We connected through them teaching me a new skill
and me being brave enough or silly enough
to think I could maybe play along.
And as it turns out, I wasn't alone.
I was talking to my brother Amos about video games
and he told me something surprising.
He told me that he has connected with his nieces and nephews
more through video games than anything else in the entire world.
Before you judge him too harshly, you need to understand that Uncle Amos lives in New Zealand.
Before he was in New Zealand, he lived in Germany.
So the entire time that my kids have been around, they've never known Uncle Amos.
They've never been in the same country as him.
He would not get an hour-long phone call from my kids, but hopping on Fortnite, playing games together, making memories together,
Maybe learning how absolutely feral my middle son is?
It's a game changer.
Now you might be sitting there wondering, what is esports?
Luckily, it's pretty simple.
Esports are just competitive video games.
Anything can be an esport if it's a competitive digital game.
Games like Fortnite, shooter games like that can be an esport,
or games like chess can be an esport if it's played with computers.
what ties them all together is that they're all competitive.
If you have ever talked to a child like ever in your life,
you've probably heard of games like Mario Kart, Fortnite, Rocket League,
all e-sports, or electronic sports.
But do not call them electronic sports
because you will lose all of your street cred,
especially with your children.
Trust me on that one.
And it's not just my kids.
who get to have this experience now.
Because the state of South Dakota this year
sanctioned esports as a high school activity.
Yeah, that's pretty great.
So right now, kids are playing esports teams
within the four walls of schools in South Dakota.
This is important because these kids are not just playing.
They're practicing.
They're practicing and gaining skills
that they will use for the rest of their lives,
skills like leadership, teamwork, communication, strategy,
and the ability to handle tough emotions.
So fast forward to these same kids start in their careers.
Businesses also get to benefit from the skills
that kids have gained in high school and in college.
And in that same vein, we can talk about the inclusivity of e-sports.
I challenge you to think of a more inclusive sport anywhere in the world.
It doesn't matter your age, your background, or your ability.
Anyone can play, compete, grow, and win in e-sports.
Of course, there's other benefits that I didn't notice
until I got further into this with my children.
I understand that as a parent, video games in e-sports
are kind of a complicated subject,
because we fear the communication that happens within these spaces,
especially because sometimes our kids are talking to strangers.
I think that that's a valid fear.
and I understand now when I joined my kids in this space,
I got to learn with them
and help teach them how to navigate this space.
I also learned that it's not just scary.
There's joy in these spaces
because this is a shared space
and we can have shared experiences here.
When I was there with them,
I got a firsthand glimpse into their world
and I learned how to better protect them
and help them through this space.
In fact, video games even helped me when it was time to introduce my kids to someone new.
As a single parent, it can be kind of awkward to introduce your kids to your significant other.
So a couple months before we introduced our families, we all hopped on Fortnite to play together.
This is a life hack. I am serious.
So his kids and my kids and us all jumped on to Fortnite together.
And it was pretty awesome because there was no pressure of like,
If we didn't have something to talk about, we're just playing a game.
We don't have to talk.
If things weren't going so great, we could just dip.
We didn't have to stay for any certain amount of time.
I got to see how he responded to my kids, silly, competitive, or sometimes a little bit
feral nature, and I also got to see how he responded to his children if they were upset
or being critical with each other.
And then, when the time came for us to introduce our families in person, we all had
something to talk about.
And maybe
this idea isn't so new after all.
Because back when I was
a kid, my parents told me that TV
would rot our brains and threw our TV
into the trash.
Growing up in rural South
Dakota in the 90s, I really
didn't miss our TV that much.
If you grew up in South Dakota
in the wild, wild west,
or east, in my case, of
South Dakota in the 90s, you probably
have a pretty good idea about what we got up
to. If not, let me paint you a picture. Imagine trying to ride cattle in a field.
Maybe climbing up to the second-story roof of an outbuilding in the winter to hop on your sled
and go screaming down the other side. Or maybe the timeless tradition of daring your city's
slicker friends to touch the electric fence, knowing full well how that will feel because you
You yourself have touched the electric fence a time or two.
But these are all memorable parts of my childhood and stories for another day.
But I will never forget the Christmas that my parents surprised us with the Nintendo 64.
This gorgeous electronic came with four controllers.
And it turns out my parents didn't throw our TV away.
They just put it in storage.
So they brought that old box down.
we all got to sit down and play together.
It was a blast
playing with my brothers, and sometimes
I even won. Like I said, I was
pretty good at Diddy Kong racing.
But the true joy
came when we would get to connect with my dad.
You see,
my dad had two distinct
sides to his personality.
On one side, he was pretty
strict and serious, and a
disciplinarian, which I
understand he was raising a gaggle of
children, so that can kind of be expected. But on the other side of him, he was playful and carefree
and absolutely hilarious. And when we all got to race and play together, this is the part of him that
we got to see. My brother Ezra told me a story about one day he was sitting at home playing
Halo, and dad came home on his lunch break. Dad sat down and started playing with him and pretty soon
half an hour goes past, then an hour, and then it's two hours later. And finally, Ezra is like,
Dad, don't you have to be at work? And dad said, work can wait. We're saving the world right now.
My dad didn't really like video games. He didn't really, he didn't like them, nor was he good at them.
But he chose to connect with us there, because that's where we were. He chose to speak our language.
even though he didn't really like it.
Now that he's been gone for eight years,
I wish that we could make more of those memories
with my kids and with us.
And as a mother now,
I draw from those experiences as much as I can.
Whenever my kids ask me to play Fortnite or Minecraft with them,
it doesn't matter how busy I am,
I never regret sitting down and playing with them.
Video games have surprised me
in so many ways, from schools creating a sense of belonging for kids who wouldn't otherwise
have that, to teaching them skills for their lives that they will use for the rest of their
lives, from my dad playing with us growing up, and me playing with my children.
When I speak of e-sports, people come out of the woodwork to share their stories with me,
not stories of sitting in a basement and chugging energy drinks, stories about connection.
That's what brings this all together.
When I began pondering how I would share this story about e-sports with you all,
I realized if I wouldn't have said yes when my kids asked me to play Fortnite,
none of this would have happened.
I said yes to them, and then my boss asked me
if I would drive up to northern Minnesota to research this e-sports competition
and see what it would take to make that happen here in Sioux Falls.
I started learning from and with my colleagues about how,
how to build this right here in Sioux Falls.
And then last September, I got to co-lead South Dakota's first,
all ages, free e-sports competition in Sioux Falls.
And our board of directors has agreed to bring it back
for round two this October.
And now today, I'm standing here on this TEDx stage,
somewhere I never saw myself in a million years.
But this whole journey started with wanting to connect with my sons.
And ultimately, that's who I'm still trying to connect with.
What I found through flailing around Fortnite saying yes to unexpected opportunities
and learning alongside my children is that connection is always worth it,
even if you don't know how to open the door.
My sons are who I keep saying yes to.
and I would say
the best unexpected benefit of all
my kids legitimately think I'm cool.
That was Hannah Bo K
speaking at TEDx Sioux Falls
in the U.S. in 2025.
If you're curious about Ted's curation,
find out more at ted.com
slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
Ted Talks Daily is part of
of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked
by the TED Research Team
and produced and edited
by our team,
Martha Estefanos,
Oliver Friedman,
Brian Green,
Lucy Little,
and Tonica Song Marnivong.
This episode was mixed
by Christopher Fazy Bogan.
Additional support
from Emma Tobner
and Daniela Baloerozzo.
I'm Elise Hugh.
I'll be back tomorrow
with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
Thank you for your patience.
Your call is important.
Can't take being on hold anymore?
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Certain conditions apply. Details at FIS.ca.
Feeling unsure in your career path?
RBC has programs and resources to help you open the door.
Discover RBC-led internships,
scholarships, networking opportunities, and upskilling programs
designed to help you launch or further your career.
At RBC, your idea of career happens here.
Learn more at rbc.com slash open doors.
Our homes are ready for any kind of cuts.
We have bandages, sprays, gels to treat them,
but we're quick to ignore gum bleeding and inflammation.
We brush it off, literally.
Use Colgate periogart to significant,
reduce gum bleeding and inflammation. It helps fight bacteria that can lead to early gum disease
and improves gum health with daily use. So the next time your gums feel sensitive, don't ignore it.
Help take care of it with Colgate Periogard. Healthy gums, confident smile.
