Netrigan said:
I'm sorry, you made a rookie mistake.
You have to figure out what sort of games a person likes before you can know what sort of game to recommend to him. Mind you, you can always toss out a Wild Card like Portal, which appeals to both FPS and puzzle fans... but you have to be prepared for people who don't find that sort of thing interesting.
Kid likes modern warfare shooters, something like Homefront immediately springs to mind, perhaps even extending into more sci-fi territory with Crysis 2 or Killzone 3. By all means attempt to expand their horizons by suggesting games you really enjoy; but if you fail to recommend games inside their comfort zone, they'll likely ignore you.
Just a quick point about this post - it's also the employee's job to *not* make recommendations about games like COD because of the fact that the vast amjority of them are rated M - and he shouldn't be (able to) buy these games. I'd even argue that they would be acting totally irresponsible to do this - certainly in this country an employee could get into a lot of trouble if they recommended something like this, and then the parent came into complain - and quite rightly so.
Portal, because of its FPS gameplay (over here it was a 12), would be a great recommendation for an employee to make to a 12 year oldFPS fan; I'd personally love for young kids to realise there *is* a whole wealth of interesting games out there which are not all about shooting and gore, and these games, due to aggresive marketing techniques (such as, say the Dead space trailers aimed at 12 year olds) are starting to wilt. Games like Sly Cooper, Jak & Dexter aren't on current consoles (other then HD collections), Ratchet and Clank IIRC didn'#t seel bucket loads; games like stacking, limbo, super meat boy show these sorts of gamedo have a place in digital distribution, but won't make it to retail. If they were a couple of year older (say 14/15), then there are games like Assassins Creed, Batman AA, and of coure Uncharter would fit right in. And if they were a little younger, then the Wii, with games like kirby, Mario and DKRC would be great. Its just 12-13 year olds are pretty much the one segment of gamers who are particularly poorly served right now; growing out of the earlier "kiddies stuff" phase, but too young for the 15 ratred games that they'd probably enjoy as they ar "older"