The games were here, they are here, and most likely they will always be here. As soon as you start growing up and have a lot of work responsibilities, you will slowly start to give up on games. But in today's modern times, young children play games more and more often. In this article I will certainly not deal with whether it is good or bad. But we will look at the possibility of how you can set the maximum allowed time for your children, which they can use within Apple Arcade, or in all games. Children should still not forget about real social life, so that they are able to communicate with people face to face and not only through messages or calls. So let's see how to do it.
How to set a child limit for Apple Arcade
If you don't want your child to spend days playing games at Apple Arcade, you need to set a limit for him through the native Screen Time settings. You do this by opening your child's iPhone to the native app Settings, where you click the option Screen time. Here then move to the section Application Limits and select an option Add constraints. Once you do so, in the categories tick possibility Games, and then click the button in the upper right corner Next. After that, just set how many hours or minutes the child can spend playing games at your own discretion. Once you've done that, click on the top right corner Add. So that the child cannot reset this limit yet, it is necessary that you block Screen Time by code. You do this by clicking the option in the Screen Time settings Use the Screen Time code. Then just enter the protective one code and it is done.
If you've heard of Apple Arcade for the first time, it's a new service from Apple that deals with games. In particular, Apple Arcade works in such a way that you pay a monthly subscription worth 139 crowns and you can play all games from this service absolutely free. Of course, some games are great, others are worse - but everyone will surely find their favorite game. Apple Arcade has been available since September 19 with the iOS 13 launch event for the general public.
Well... If we want to be precise and write procedures for how to do this, then the setting definitely does not look like this, and the description here is quite confusing and misleading. Perhaps the author should sit next to someone who tries to set this up according to his description and would be very surprised.
Because he's an idiot and describes a procedure for a version of the OS that isn't public yet. In addition, he has already clicked on this function, so it is displayed differently than when it was first set up.
And this reaffirms what I've been saying all the time - guts like these geniuses at Apple should not have access to iOS betas at all, because they don't know how to handle it properly, they don't know how to behave responsibly and then they themselves are confused about what and how it is in the public version and what and how in the beta version. Then they just spread misinformation and confusion and give Apple an embarrassment and a bad name. They're immature scumbags who just replaced a bunch of people who understood at least a little and really enjoyed it. Shame on Jablíčkář and the entire TextFactory.