Or it could be the gaming industry changing as a whole?Xzi said:"Streamlining" is ruining many of the games I probably would have enjoyed a lot more if not for it. And it sure as hell wasn't me or anyone like me that requested that games start to be "streamlined." So if not casual gamers, what do suggest that we call people who are in favor that practice? I can think of many, much harsher terms, but I think for their sake we should probably just stick with it.-Samurai- said:It isn't respected because it doesn't exist.
There are people that play games, and people that don't. "Hardcore" and "casual" are like the sub-sub-genres in music; They're made up by insecure elitists that want to feel better than someone because of what they enjoy, and want something to ***** about.
You know what ruins games? People like the majority of the people in this thread. Shut up and go play your games.
Said it best.TheMehKingdom said:This is why: http://www.nerfnow.com/comic/330
Viva Pinata is definitely not casual. It is quite a challenging game when you get to the later stages. Just because it has a farming aspect to it, please don't speak of it like it's Farmville.Flailing Escapist said:But I'm not sure casual gaming, by itself, should be respected. I like to sit down and play Viva Pinata every once in a while but we all know that casual gaming is only here at the party to make money and they'll leave once people don't like it anymore only to come back and hour later in a different costume.
I know, right? Filthy peasants, they didn't shell out all of twenty dollars for a game, the non-contributing zeros. I mean, going to a dedicated game buying site, noticing a game is free, and downloading it to see what the big fuss is all about is the most low class thing ever. And it's not like anyone was still actually buying the game, right? Every single free to play player would never even put his filthy little pleb hands on it if it wasn't free.Monxerot said:Personally i avoid them like the plague and if and when i rarely play tf2 then i join servers with no f2p-players so the casual community is kept behind a steelfence, guarded by firelions, on a different continent...in space
This. I consider myself a video game enthusiast. You don't expect an avid reader to consider a casual Harry Potter fan as being on the same level. Or a movie enthusiast to consider a casual blockbuster goer to be on the same level as them. Casual gaming (and by extension players) isn't/aren't bad. But it isn't on the same level as what I do.ShadowsofHope said:Because when you compare casual gamers to mainstream gamers, casual gamers usually don't bother to get very acquainted with the industry they are buying from, and usually are people whom have made the mainstream gamer's life hell in the past (Mario and like is still something, to them, that only the "geeks" do, while the "cool" people only play things like FB games and iPhone apps).
So, people can be "casual" gamers, but I wouldn't personally call them "gamers" until they at least have some knowledge about the medium as a whole they are tiptoeing in. Ah, and actually play games that take more effort than just logging in every morning to check a FB game status.
But if your elo is high enough in LoL, I wouldn't think the casual gamers would be as much of an issue.Monxerot said:Casual gaming is fine in itself i mean i have no problem with the type of straightforward easymode indiestuff or even if its by a larger company.
It's the casual community you can't stand, its the casual players who do not deserve any respect
since they themselves do not respect the other gaming communities and usually act like little selfentitled dipshits just because theyre not being spoonfed and held by the hand in every single game they feel like playing.
Casual gaming communities have ruined a lot of good games like TF2,LoL, WoW etc
and they need to be dealt with in the same way Rift does for example.
In directly casual GAMES ofc they can get whatever they want because thats the target audience
but when they start to act as if every game needs to be adapted for the casual community, thats when things go terribly wrong
Personally i avoid them like the plague and if and when i rarely play tf2 then i join servers with no f2p-players so the casual community is kept behind a steelfence, guarded by firelions, on a different continent...in space
Your logic fails. Since when does music have a learning curve? Since when is music an interactive form of entertainment that can not function without the viewer's feedback?-Samurai- said:It isn't respected because it doesn't exist.
There are people that play games, and people that don't. "Hardcore" and "casual" are like the sub-sub-genres in music; They're made up by insecure elitists that want to feel better than someone because of what they enjoy, and want something to ***** about.
No, it's you, people like you and people with an attitude like yours that ruin games and things much more important than games. Though I get the impression you're just trolling.-Samurai- said:You know what ruins games? People like the majority of the people in this thread. Shut up and go play your games.
I don't see how gamers deserve any respect, casual or hardcore. My respect goes out to the modders, coders, indie developers, community managers and all the people who engage more actively, creating something new of some (arguable) value than merely playing as intended.They are like spoiled children.
Games offer the dominance male needs but AT LEAST hardcore gamers kinda deserve some respect because what they did needs skill and their reason for feeling better is close to real.
I know quite a few people who'd strongly disagree with that.Being a game designer is like being a trickster that gets money for what he does
Oh god. It's one of you. "I disagree with what you're saying, so you're trolling.". Because you don't see that every day.archont said:Your logic fails. Since when does music have a learning curve? Since when is music an interactive form of entertainment that can not function without the viewer's feedback?-Samurai- said:It isn't respected because it doesn't exist.
There are people that play games, and people that don't. "Hardcore" and "casual" are like the sub-sub-genres in music; They're made up by insecure elitists that want to feel better than someone because of what they enjoy, and want something to ***** about.
My attitude of "let people like what they like and stop trying to be an elitist *****" ruins things? How so? I'm curious to know how letting people enjoy what they like without being blamed for shitty industry standards makes things worse.No, it's you, people like you and people with an attitude like yours that ruin games and things much more important than games. Though I get the impression you're just trolling.-Samurai- said:You know what ruins games? People like the majority of the people in this thread. Shut up and go play your games.
Anyway, I would gladly go play my games but that's the whole point - there's less and less good games left to play and the trend is towards shittier casual games.
As sad as a reason as that is to not respect casual gaming, I'm pretty sure that is one of the biggest reasons. Being completely honest, I do like gaming to be a minority.Yosharian said:Maybe because we were happy with gaming being a 'minority'.
How about you follow your own advice and read what I wrote? If you do there's a chance you'll notice the part with "And while there's nothing wrong with shitty casual games[...]". If you spend some more time reading that post you might even come to the conclusion that I don't, at any point, blame casual gamers or casual games for the state of the industry. With the part "I don't see how gamers deserve any respect, casual or hardcore." I thought I made it reasonably clear that I don't put a ">" between Hardcore gamers and Casual gamers. False assumption on your part - am I not being explicit enough?-Samurai- said:Oh god. It's one of you. "I disagree with what you're saying, so you're trolling.". Because you don't see that every day.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAnyway. Do you mind re-reading that paragraph? You missed the point by a few thousand miles. ur readin comprehenshun skillz phail mashed brotato
My attitude of "let people like what they like and stop trying to be an elitist *****" ruins things? How so? I'm curious to know how letting people enjoy what they like without being blamed for shitty industry standards makes things worse.
"Casual" games and gamers aren't the problem. The industry hasn't properly adjusted to being mainstream yet. They're still in the experimental stage where they're trying to figure out what's going to get them more money. Right now it's small, simple games and military shooters. In the next few years? Who knows? But I'm sure the kids of those years will still ***** about something.
But, hey, if you gotta blame someone, why not blame the people that play the games being made for them? Because it's their fault they enjoy something you don't, and it's their fault you(maybe not specifically you(although probably specifically you), but the people bitching about "casual" games) can't adjust to a changing industry.
Here's a problem with your examples, if you will. They aren't making a Jazz record if they're making a game with broader appeal. They're making maybe a light rock album, maybe something poppy. Games aren't just some genre, they're an entire medium to themselves. There's more to art than painted pictures - you have comics, you have concept art, you have abstract modern work, you have the sorts of stuff that show up in children's books. Equating games to one genre of a medium, be that Jazz or Fine Art, is an outright wrong comparison.Xzi said:The industry as a whole is changing, just not for the better. The gaming industry used to be one of the few remaining industries that wasn't driven entirely by greed, but now that Activision and EA own damn near everything, most of our favorite developers have turned into something no better than Enron or Goldman Sachs.-Samurai- said:Or it could be the gaming industry changing as a whole?
"Streamlining" is just another one of those "words of the month". Last month it was "entitled" and the many variations.
Could you define "streamlining" and explain to me why it's bad for the industry as a whole? Preferably with facts and not "I hate streamlining because...".
Streamlining is simply the industry code word for dumbing down. It's attempting to build a game for non-gamers. Which is much like trying to make a Jazz record for people who aren't fans of Jazz. It's silly. If there are people out there that don't appreciate the medium as it is, they aren't going to suddenly enjoy an RPG just because you make ridiculously simple. In fact, that's probably going to lower their opinion of gaming and gamers even further, making them believe that we're all dumb for enjoying something so shallow.
Art isn't appreciated by everyone, either. That doesn't mean you're going to see a famous landscape artist paint Mickey Mouse to try and "broaden his appeal." So if we ever want to see gaming elevated to a higher regard, we can't just change it for every dim-witted jackass that can't understand the difference between a light attack and a heavy attack.
So basically you're saying those who have been playing different games all their life should just shut up, hop on the industry bandwagon of simple games and COD clones. That doesn't seem fair to them why should they change their personal taste for those that never really gave a fuck about gaming until a few years ago.-Samurai- said:Oh god. It's one of you. "I disagree with what you're saying, so you're trolling.". Because you don't see that every day.archont said:Your logic fails. Since when does music have a learning curve? Since when is music an interactive form of entertainment that can not function without the viewer's feedback?-Samurai- said:It isn't respected because it doesn't exist.
There are people that play games, and people that don't. "Hardcore" and "casual" are like the sub-sub-genres in music; They're made up by insecure elitists that want to feel better than someone because of what they enjoy, and want something to ***** about.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAnyway. Do you mind re-reading that paragraph? You missed the point by a few thousand miles. ur readin comprehenshun skillz phail mashed brotato
My attitude of "let people like what they like and stop trying to be an elitist *****" ruins things? How so? I'm curious to know how letting people enjoy what they like without being blamed for shitty industry standards makes things worse.No, it's you, people like you and people with an attitude like yours that ruin games and things much more important than games. Though I get the impression you're just trolling.-Samurai- said:You know what ruins games? People like the majority of the people in this thread. Shut up and go play your games.
Anyway, I would gladly go play my games but that's the whole point - there's less and less good games left to play and the trend is towards shittier casual games.
"Casual" games and gamers aren't the problem. The industry hasn't properly adjusted to being mainstream yet. They're still in the experimental stage where they're trying to figure out what's going to get them more money. Right now it's small, simple games and military shooters. In the next few years? Who knows? But I'm sure the kids of those years will still ***** about something.
But, hey, if you gotta blame someone, why not blame the people that play the games being made for them? Because it's their fault they enjoy something you don't, and it's their fault you(maybe not specifically you(although probably specifically you), but the people bitching about "casual" games) can't adjust to a changing industry.
An inescapable part of the human nature, but you're not saying that this and only this is the sole reason for the divide which has no objective basis whatsoever?LordFisheh said:Because it's always nice to have someone to look down on.
Are you saying it's impossible to objectively quantify and compare hobbies or that it's immoral to do so?LordFisheh said:If you have to make a subjective 'my hobby is better' concept with a shaky rational basis to do so then so be it.