Please, guys, don't be such useless nitpickers.
Yeah, obviously if you play on a PC, you can grammatically get away with calling yourself a "PC gamer". But what the OP asked, is what PC gamers as a subculture and community consist of.
You can terrorize children with your scary Halloween costume all you want, but that's still not most people would call a "terrorist". You can call yoursef a hipster, and no one will think that you are talking about the 1940's jazz subculture.
Words can have asumed implications, and project a certain image.
Basically, I disagree with the OP that nowadays PC gaming is mostly considered to be about multiplayer. Specifically, it's as much about multiplayer, as console gaming is all about military shooters.
Yeah, those are the biggest ones, and those are the ones that most people are likely to be recognized, but at the same time, if you go to any place where people proudly self-identify as hardcore PC gamers, you will mostly see that they are proud of the exact interests that you have listed: indie games, emulators, also maybe mods, old-school RPGs, and RTS, and so on.
Overall, the main value of PC gaming that people are proud of, seems to be independence in the sense of not relying on a first party, not relying on publishers at all, having the right to fix things, upgrade and fine-tune games, whether it's about graphics, or gameplay mechanics, or game production.
Yeah, obviously if you play on a PC, you can grammatically get away with calling yourself a "PC gamer". But what the OP asked, is what PC gamers as a subculture and community consist of.
You can terrorize children with your scary Halloween costume all you want, but that's still not most people would call a "terrorist". You can call yoursef a hipster, and no one will think that you are talking about the 1940's jazz subculture.
Words can have asumed implications, and project a certain image.
Basically, I disagree with the OP that nowadays PC gaming is mostly considered to be about multiplayer. Specifically, it's as much about multiplayer, as console gaming is all about military shooters.
Yeah, those are the biggest ones, and those are the ones that most people are likely to be recognized, but at the same time, if you go to any place where people proudly self-identify as hardcore PC gamers, you will mostly see that they are proud of the exact interests that you have listed: indie games, emulators, also maybe mods, old-school RPGs, and RTS, and so on.
Overall, the main value of PC gaming that people are proud of, seems to be independence in the sense of not relying on a first party, not relying on publishers at all, having the right to fix things, upgrade and fine-tune games, whether it's about graphics, or gameplay mechanics, or game production.