zeldagirl said:
A) There are many things that EC have enlightened me, or presented that allowed me to think about it differently. Sorry you disagree, but your opinion is not fact.
It's not. Did I ever say it is? But for me, it's "Captain Obvious: The Show". And I don't have to like it just because someone might find it insightful.
zeldagirl said:
B) You didn't understand the gamification segment, did you? It wasn't about not studying, it was about encouraging *more* studying through different types of engagement. Something that MANY teachers are interested in exploring, because as it stands, what the US education system is doing right now isn't really cutting it for *many* students.
More studying?
The guy was proposing to change the whole system.
I saw that video for what it was - a bunch of horribly underdeveloped missteps in an entire idea I don't think should be taken seriously. If there was some really deep "command" or "call to arms" there, I didn't see it.
zeldagirl said:
C) If you think that what they do is "order around," then I'm sorry about how you perceive reality. They encourage others to take the media in a transcendent direction - not out of a desire to be pretentious, but because you can genuinely tell these people want games to be an amazing experience. They aren't arguing that games can't be just for fun and always have to be art, they just want the industry to be taken more seriously by society (because the truth is, it still gets flack from many directions). There is nothing wrong in that - they aren't trying to force it down anyone's throat, they are just trying to promote discussion about how to improve the medium.
Encourage - you "could do" something.
Command - you "have to do" something.
They use "have to". They use it all the time. It makes the show barely watchable.
Also, where did that "games r art" argument come from? I never said otherwise. Hell, I never even mentioned the argument.
The last two sentences I just shake my head at. If they want to preach on about how "trash talking is bad" and "buying bad games is bad", they can go right ahead. But their fans should not expect me to take them seriously.
In one of their episodes, there was a phrase along the lines of "Don't buy bad games. Don't let your friends settle for them, too".
That phrase sums up the show for me. It's pompous, doesn't encourage much valuable discussion and it's preachy, preachy, preachy.