^ Pretty much. While he acknowledges that the skills learned playing action games are "useless", he seems to claim that they are more important than the desire to fully explore the territory or story of an RPG, for example.
This sounds like exactly the same argument I hear from World of Warcraft PvP snobs, that they "use their brains" while PvE'ers just "push buttons". All it amounts to in either case is a lot of practice and time wasting, and I enjoy both, so where does that leave me in his scheme? It's not like learning to shoryuken is learning to do open heart surgery, or hell, even throw a curve ball IRL. I like the Virtua Fighter series for God's sake, you can't get much more technical than that as far as playing video-games goes, and yet I spend a lot of free time playing WoW.
I think he has a point in there about the false sense of accomplishment that playing a game can bring a person. Some people play games because their real life is unfulfilling and the sense of achievement levelling up a character, unlocking 100% of a game, mastering a fighting move, or downing a new raid boss is hard to resist. But his argument is overshadowed by his attempts to legitimize his own tastes. It's like someone quitting drinking and then picking up a coke habit and claiming it's a better habit to have because it's easier to go about daily life high than drunk.