I'm surprised by the nearly 80% "No" vote. Yeah, I know video games draw a younger-than-average crowd, but I figured we'd have enough long-time series veterans to have more than 25% "yes".
I waffle on whether I want to. It would take a lot of time, and that would probably mean a lot less time not just at CivFanatics, but for other hobbies as well. But I'd like to think that (with the right partner) I could be good at it. Maybe even impart some life wisdom that I wish I'd learned from my parents at an earlier age. Still, the commitment.
In the end I suspect the answer for me will depend on who I marry, if anyone, and their preferences. I could be persuaded either way.
And I agree with Smellincoffee, if at all possible, better to face that challenge with a partner, so they can pick up for you when you are feeling overwhelmed, and vice versa. If it's not in the cards to meet the right girl and marry and have kids (or help raise kids she already has), then I can't see trying to do it alone.
There are a couple of people on the forum who I've noticed have really cut back on their presence since becoming parents (not gonna name names). Of course that's a normal and reasonable thing, since RL is actually more important than a gaming forum.
On the other hand, there are some people who incorporate their parenthood into their hobbies. I know a family in a barony north of here with at least 3 generations who are active SCA members (could be 4 by now, if the youngest ones I knew have married and had kids).
I've mentioned my reasons a few times already over the years for opting for no human children. They're reasons I consider valid and reasonable, and don't appreciate anyone arguing with me or trying to guilt-trip me over it - as one person did, to the point of claiming that I was "depriving the world of someone who could have been awesome". Well, it's flattering that someone thought that I would produce an "awesome" kid. But I know that the experience would not be awesome, and with my family's medical history (on both sides), having children is one of the most irresponsible things I could ever do.
Today is the 10th anniversary of my mother's death, from cancer. She's the third, maybe the fourth woman in her side of the family within the last 3 generations to have cancer, and the third to die from it. There's just my aunt and me left, and given my age now, I really hope that this is one more area where I take after my dad's side rather than my mom's. Though my dad's side carries some scary stuff, too. Under the circumstances, I think I'd have been insane to risk passing this on to yet another generation. I made the decision in my early 20s, when I knew that the older of my mother's two sisters was terminal. It wasn't an easy decision, but I haven't regretted it.
So... I have a mug that says "All My Children Have Paws." I became a cat mom. I'm aware that some people scoff at such a label, and some others find it insulting, as though I'm mocking people who have human children. But it's something that the vets consider valid, and the paperwork I signed for Maddy's cremation 2 weeks ago identifies me as her Cat Parent/Guardian. And given that I've been raising cats since 1977 - nearly 47 years - I think I've earned that.