Parents generously gifted an 18-year-old player a King of Glory V10 account with an astonishing number of skins.
2026-01-27 13:09
Restricting gaming time for underage players is indeed cruel for modern young people. They lose a way to relax and are forced to face their studies. This is the reality they have no choice but to accept, as it concerns their future. They can't let games drag them down. However, parents see and appreciate the hard work they put into their studies. Although games do have a birthday system, the benefits are like squeezing toothpaste—allowing the birthday person to choose a specific skin to experience on that day. It's nothing special. What truly breaks down defenses is often the surprises in real life.
Received a King of Glory account as a coming-of-age ceremony
Recently, a player who just turned 18 shared his experience online, saying he received a top-tier gift: an account with multiple high-end skins. Initially, it seemed like an extra perk, but it turned out to be a secret his parents had kept hidden – a V10 account. For most people, coming-of-age gifts might include phones, computers, game consoles, or luxury brand clothing. But to receive a game account is truly astonishing. His story, posted on forums, is enough to make countless players envious. How many parents would put so much thought into gifts, figuring out how to reward their children, and secretly rejoice at any celebration? How could they possibly expect material satisfaction?
The gift is meaningful, and it helps to shed the label that gaming is a waste of time.
No matter how rapidly esports develops, changing parents' minds and preventing them from hindering their children's dreams of becoming professional players is extremely difficult. Despite advanced technology, traditional thinking persists, with parents believing that esports is not part of sports, that online games poison their minds and waste their time, and that their future is limitless. Why choose such a difficult path when they could instead study highly adaptable subjects like medicine, engineering, or computer science?
This gift, seemingly a boast, actually reveals the modern parents' approval of Honor of Kings and online games. While others would rather smash their children's phones and not even allow them to touch social media, this game account is more like a shared hobby and memory between two generations for this 18-year-old. Its value surpasses the price of the skins and crystals inside, because the V10 label means that the parents raised the account themselves, collected rare skins, and did not hire any external boosting services.
Image source: Internet
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