This. Don't spend money on a game if there is a guaranteed limit to the fun and quality.)rStrangelove]
Don't get games you can't mod.
This. Don't spend money on a game if there is a guaranteed limit to the fun and quality.)rStrangelove]
Don't get games you can't mod.
If you think post numbers mean something your clearly just a idiot, who is one of the masses. Try reading, and taking in what its about. Not just shooting A man down with no substance replays.Xartyve2 said:Another elitist who doesn't want filthy non gamers playing games. Oh and he has 5 posts! Listen to this guy, he's clearly being objective and unbiased about this whole thing!
Dude, get a blog.
Not only wrong but severely mistaken in your opinion on hardcore.Grand Master Sage said:elaborate lol. well if you fee like itVanguard_Ex said:I think you're wrong.
That would be QWOP. And it's hellishly difficult.jthwilliams said:Hmmmm, like many others, I think the problem here is your definition of hardcore game. If you are looking for games that are hard to play/master, there is a game out there that I can't remeber the name of but you can find if you search that requires you to make a man run using 4 keys to control different parts of the legs. I would call that a very hard game, but I wouldn't call it a hardcore game.
I don't agree. Short term yes, but not in the long term. The hardcore people are the ones who will always return but the casuals...this is a problem Nintendo is currently facing big time with the 3DS. The 3DS isn't selling as well as the big N hoped and why is that? Mainly because the casuals already know what games they like (casual games) and the can already get those games on the cheaper 3DS. I'm guessing that a lot of the casuals who do buy a 3ds are the people who don't already have a regular DS (I know this is the case with my younger sister). And even then, they just end up buying regular DS games.Grand Master Sage said:for a simple reason really, now that video games have become a profitable market, there really is no incentive to make a good hardcore game anymore that really pleases an increasingly niche section of gamers. Every year i see less and less hardcore games coming out( i think the last one i played was Vanquish, and that game wasn't very successful. I don't even want to think about FPS). The fact of the matter is, the people who truly care about video games are greatly outnumbered by casuals, and the gap will only increase. Its even making its way into PC, which for a long time was protected from too much casual entry due to it being somewhat expensive, and not completely easy to pick up, but now even it is becoming more accessible and watered down. This is a serious problem guys we need to consider, but there's not much we can do about it. one day everything's going to be a wagglenoobtubenolearningcurve casual fest, and devs are still going to make millions.
Just my opinion though. what do you guys think?
yup thisSassafrass said:Hardcore gaming has always been dead to me.
As I'm one who believes that gaming is simply gaming, neither casual nor hardcore no matter how much you like to fool yourself otherwise. And in my eyes only those who win money in competitions, like the MLG dudes, can ever call themselves hardcore.
Sorry to break it to you, but you're coming across like the gaming equivalent of a hipster. You refuse to believe that anything remotely 'mainstream' can fit your definition of 'hardcore,' and you even set up your standards to fulfill that. Do you think 'casual' gamers are the ones going out to buy Skyrim and Battlefield, Saints Row and Assassin's Creed? Or have those become too popular to be considered 'hardcore'?Grand Master Sage said:for a simple reason really, now that video games have become a profitable market, there really is no incentive to make a good hardcore game anymore that really pleases an increasingly niche section of gamers. Every year i see less and less hardcore games coming out( i think the last one i played was Vanquish, and that game wasn't very successful. I don't even want to think about FPS). The fact of the matter is, the people who truly care about video games are greatly outnumbered by casuals, and the gap will only increase. Its even making its way into PC, which for a long time was protected from too much casual entry due to it being somewhat expensive, and not completely easy to pick up, but now even it is becoming more accessible and watered down. This is a serious problem guys we need to consider, but there's not much we can do about it. one day everything's going to be a wagglenoobtubenolearningcurve casual fest, and devs are still going to make millions.