Microsoft refers to core audience as "Sweaty thirty year olds in Metallica t-shirts"

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Burst6

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Mar 16, 2009
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I think he means successful rich 30-year-olds that come back from extreme sports sessions to enjoy nice games in comfortable t-shirts.
 

Dogstile

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Jan 17, 2009
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Thats one guy making a stupid comment, not microsoft :p

Edit:

Because i just read the thread, I would like to add one thing.

I'm wearing a Papa Roach tee.
 

w-Jinksy

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May 30, 2009
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Amnestic said:
No, we're sweaty twenty year olds in Dragonforce t-shirts.
speak for yourself i wear a Blind Guardian one.

OT:this strikes me as rather dumb move to insult some of your audience just to make some airheads in pretty clothes feel better about waggling around in front of kinect.
 

TheDrunkNinja

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Jun 12, 2009
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DNA said:
And MY point is, no names were called. Resorting to telling someone to grow up is just proving my point for me. Refer to my statement about puffed up pride. You fit it. You OBVIOUSLY think you are wronged in some fashion when there was no such thing going on. Kinect isn't marketed toward you. And you cry foul because they are providing evidence that its more suited for a family-setting than a "hardcore" basement dweller. So again, why so blue brown bear?
Proving my point that you fit the hater profile you were preaching against not long ago. So again, never once did I mention hardcore over casual. And seriously? No names were called? Right, Microsoft didn't totally call millions of people sweaty thirty year olds in Metallica t-shirts for the simple fact that they did not agree with them.

That wasn't your point at all. It seems to me, you're entire argument is that people deserve to be insulted by their service providers.
 

Therumancer

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Nov 28, 2007
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It's pretty typical actually. It's what happens when any industry becomes big, corperate, and decides to go where the big bucks are. Simply put nerds are by their nature on the fringe of society, and unpopular for it. There are millions of us, and that's a huge audience, but it's dwarfed by what can be gained by catering to the mainstream people who are NOT nerds. To get those people to support a nerd hobby, they need to de-nerd it, or otherwise convince people that it is no longer nerdy.

From the perspective of business, there is no reason to make *A* profit when you could make a bigger profit for the same amount of effort. Sell a million copies of a game to a bunch of nerds and you make serious bank, but sell ten million copies to the mainstream and it's almost a liscence to print your own money (as some people put it).

There really is no loyalty to an established fan base anymore. I think what we're seeing is that the gamers who have supported gaming to get to this point are being brushed aside slowly but surely. Simply put we're rapidly becoming an inconveinence. The voice that cries with nerd rage and inspires guilt whenever the industry goes after an ever larger bottom line, demanding what are comparitively "niche products" even if there are a lot of us.

I think of it as being very similar to what happened with paper and pencil RPGs, today people think of those games as something primarly played by nerdy kids in high school and what not. However, it had it's origins with a collegiate fringe of adults who were into wargaming. While on a differant scale, this is similar to how the target audience D&D was written for became younger, with the rules and such greatly simplified for ease of play by a wider group of customers.

At least this is how I see it, and it's not an isolated incident. I think the point is that they don't care if it offends what has been their core player base up until now, simply put the "hardcore" crowd is not as profitable as the mainstream. Whether the description there is true or not (like most stereotypes it's more often true than not) that's how gaming is perceived and the image they need to kill in order to get the audience they want. At a certain point you might see "serious gamers" actively brushed under the rug.
 
Apr 24, 2008
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DNA said:
Sexual Harassment Panda said:
DNA said:
Diddy_Mao said:
Wait why are we getting upset about this?
Microsoft said that gaming isn't for Sweaty 30 year olds in Metallica T shirts. How is that a bad thing?

There's been a steady uphill battle to prove that "gamers" aren't a bunch of socially retarded morons with the attention spans of Ritalin kids. So why does this statement suddenly make people upset?
Because microsoft said it, and the internet hatemachine is so blind by microsoft hate it canont even tell when its being defended.
"Gaming's not just for sweaty thirty year olds in Metallica t-shirts".

I've highlighted the part that makes this an offensive statement to the core audience, because the word "just" is what implies that that is their current demographic.

This could have been worded a thousand ways that wouldn't have been so divisive. If they want to be Nintendo, that's fine, but they probably shouldn't burn the bridge...especially since they're not even half way across it.
They aren't even ON the bridge you think they are on is why this is blind hate. I didn't know a console could have a demographic. Because as it stands, screaming 12 year olds playing halo and MW2 online is the most populace "demographic" which then in turn, eliminates you as a "core demographic".

Its an ice breaker addressing, in a marketing standpoint, an issue of stereotype prejudice that is portrayed on "the new hardware" every time hardware gets released.
That's crap...
They really could have promoted the new product to a new audience without saything anything about their existing fanbase. It was petty and tasteless...

"Buy our deodrant, it smells nice!"

"Buy our deodrant...or the girls won't have sex with you"

Honestly, which do you appreciate more? I'm willing to bet it's the positive marketing.
 

Lyri

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tlozoot said:
http://www.atomicmpc.com.au/News/230934,microsofts-kinect-launch-laughs-at-sweaty-gamers.aspx

"Gaming's not just for sweaty thirty year olds in Metallica t-shirts," quipped Microsoft's regional entertainment tzar at yesterday's lifestyle event, David McLean. The audience of fashion editors and lifestyle doyens yukked it up appreciatively, but we couldn't believe our ears. That's it? That's what you're reducing a huge percentage of your audience to now - a one-liner gag to make the cheap-seats feel it's okay to waddle about in front of their television sets?


Wow...just wow Microsoft. Way to perpetuate gross and out-dated stereotypes about your core audience.
That article made me lol.

In case we didn't notice, gaming isn't exactly this prodigal medium everyone around here seems to think it is. It has a pretty bad wrap, people out there DO think that games are played by children or "sweaty gamers in their Metallica T-Shirts".
He's not paid to stand up on that podium to undo the negative stereotypes of the general public, that would take more than one man and far greater length of time.

Yeah all right it was a dig at some of us, but seriously think of all the shit you as a gamer has posted about people in their industry, the shoe slips to the other foot and suddenly everyone is accountable.

If his comment sells a few more units and brings gaming to a wider audience than just the aforementioned, hooting drunken frat boys and kids on their Wii then fine by me.
Picking up a games console no longer means you'll end up like those World of Warcraft horror stories. Your children won't end up sitting on the couch when they want to play games, now they can put their games into a healthy, active lifestyle.
Probably what Microsoft are aiming for with Kinect and good luck to them.

Microsoft are trying to make the "sad video game nerd" disappear, I'll put my hands together for that.
Bigger picture people; start thinking about it. Not your wounded pride, walk it off.
 

teutonicman

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Dear Microsoft gaming division(specifically David McLean)

Eat all the dicks. I know your insulting your only bread and butter because you are trying to build a connection with what you hope will be your new consumer demographics. However when trying to market a new piece of technology to an entirely foreign consumer demographic my vast(read: non existent) marketing experience tells me you should eat some dicks instead.

Love

Matt
 

NoNameMcgee

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Feb 24, 2009
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Generic Gamer said:
tlozoot said:
I agree with you. I also think that 'gaming' is quite cliquey (I'm British so...er...might be using that in the wrong context...) and thus pretty intimidating to an outsider. I think the term 'gamer' goes some way in establishing this. "Look at us!" it seems to say "We've got our own club, and we even have our own special name!"

It doesn't help that we're so hostile towards 'casual gamers'...especially to the point where we've invented a new, sub, inferior label for them.
Yeah but isn't that like metalheads not wanting to be stuck with emos? Cliques (also British so I'll just hope it's right) like to be small, it gives it more of a fraternal air but it's silly when a clique wants to be accepted but not popular, it's not possible to be a widely accepted niche hobby.

I've said it before in another article but as a gamer you have 2 choices, either disassociate yourself from the stereotype or put up with it, but you can't ask people to pretend a perfectly viable stereotype doesn't exist. Me personally? I don't like being called a gamer in my personal life and I never put it on my CV or anything else. I wouldn't mind if the losers in the community were less noticeable but I can't ask people to ignore them so either I don't sit with them or I make it clear I'm not like them.

Incidentally that's a hobby on here, trying to get people to not be like that. I have met with mixed results so far but ho-hum, we'll get there!
I think it is humorous how many people in the thread have replied with something similar to "that's complete bullshit! I am only 29 and three-quarters and I might be fat and sweaty and a metalhead but I don't like metallica!" - (exaggerated for effect.) Like it's really much different. I don't actually agree with the age part, I think the majority of 'gamers' are teenagers and people in their early 20s, but all the other stereotypes I have heard hold true... very fat or very skinny, sweaty, metalhead, antisocial, etc... I don't have any gamer friends in real life, probably because I don't fit in with that general community, but the majority of those I have met and the majority of people on all gaming internet forums I have frequented completely fall into this stereotype somewhat. In fact the gamer stereotype is one of the only stereotypes I have encountered that actually seems true for the most part, from my experiences.

As someone who doesn't identify as a nerd, doesn't identify as a hardcore gamer, and is basically just "someone who has various hobbies and one of them happens to be playing games" I find myself unphased by these comments by Microsoft and completely understanding why this was said in the first place. The gaming community is VERY intimidating to an outsider; heck, it is very intimidating to me and I have been playing games since I was about 8. If you don't fit into their little personality cliques you're not welcome, because the community is sadly just not very varied and difficult to get along with if you don't have something in common with them besides just games.

It doesn't help that every time you try to play an online game of anything at all, all you find at every turn are these so called 'hardcore gamers' who take the game way too seriously and shout "FUCKING NOOB" if you're not as good as they are. and the majority of the time I am playing on PC games, which are supposed to have the most mature people of the gaming community. Yeah right.
 

archf13nd

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Aug 22, 2010
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It's a simple defense to why they are marketing for the casual audience. No need to get offended. =P
 

DeaconSawyer

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Aug 19, 2010
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Microsoft can say whatever they want about gamers as far as I'm concerned, because them saying it doesn't make it true. Fact is, as long as they do good work for me and the rest of their consumer base, I really don't care if they know what I am or am not like. If that view starts to interfere with the quality of product they produce, however, then there is an issue.

Fortunately the solution is simple.
 

bloodshed113094

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Jul 16, 2010
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wow, i have never even heard of a guy over 20 playing xbox live, or at least in the game's I've played. I'm also not sweaty, 30 or even own a music propaganda shirt