There's been a lot of hubbub over the years about media looking down upon us, the stereotypes that are attributed to gamers, the possibility that video games could serve to be a medium of art, the immaturity of developers when it comes to mature themes, etc. The vocal gaming community (which is separate than the non vocal majority of gamers, who frankly probably don't care about the industry's direction) seems to want to make video games and us by extension to be taken seriously by the mainstream. Me included.
My question is thus, *why* do we want to be taken seriously, particularly since there's no danger of our medium being banned or censored anymore after the recent Supreme Court decision. Do people feel that annoyed when certain news media (*cough* Fox *cough*) portrays video gamers in a negative light? Or is it because if we seek to be taken seriously then eventually we could get mature games, which we consider better? Is it because of our ego? Or is it some other reason entirely?
My personal reason is that I like emotionally compelling video games, so by supporting the "video games can be art!" ideology I feel like demand will warrant more emotionally compelling and mature video games. That's just my reason though, and I don't have a clue as to the community's reasoning as a whole.
My question is thus, *why* do we want to be taken seriously, particularly since there's no danger of our medium being banned or censored anymore after the recent Supreme Court decision. Do people feel that annoyed when certain news media (*cough* Fox *cough*) portrays video gamers in a negative light? Or is it because if we seek to be taken seriously then eventually we could get mature games, which we consider better? Is it because of our ego? Or is it some other reason entirely?
My personal reason is that I like emotionally compelling video games, so by supporting the "video games can be art!" ideology I feel like demand will warrant more emotionally compelling and mature video games. That's just my reason though, and I don't have a clue as to the community's reasoning as a whole.