Dear hardcore gamers,
Get over yourselves.
Some people don't care that you can play Resistance: Fall of Man at 60 fps in 1080i. Most of the teenage girls playing Nintendogs don't even know what that means. Most of the elderly people enjoying Wii Bowling probably don't care.
Not everyone can afford or, alternatively, have parents that can afford the thousands of dollars for a big-screen HDTV, killer sound system, and Playstation 3 or Xbox 360. Similarly, not everyone can afford the latest video card and CPU for their gaming rig.
So keep on blogging about how that next-gen first-person shooter isn't going to be released for the Wii. Go ahead and call the Nintendo DS a "handheld for little girls." Don't stop mocking ideas upcoming games like Wii Fit on my behalf.
Go right ahead and keep whining. Just realize that the majority of the gaming industry is ignoring you completely.
Let the teenage girls have their Nintendogs games.
Let the elderly people enjoy their Wii Bowling tournaments.
Let the mothers in their thirties enjoy Bejeweled.
Let the anime nerds keep dancing to bad techno in DDR.
If you're going to play the latest and greatest "hardcore games," go right ahead. Just don't feel the need to bash anyone you consider "beneath" you.
As someone who used to tease his best friend for playing The Sims, I can say that I understand where you're coming from. Gaming, like the Internet, used to be dominated by nerds. Now your little sister has a DS, your grandma has a Wii at her retirement home, and your dad plays Halo with you now and then.
But is it really so bad that more people are learning to love gaming? Is it so awful when your parents stop talking about "those stupid video games" and pick up Wii Golf?
It's true; gaming is not solely the domain of nerds any more. But are we really missing much? Haven't we had enough of toilet humor, male posturing, and "zomgbbq thta's ghey!!!" forum posts? Isn't it time we shake the stereotype of the male gamer as a Caucasian, socially challenged 16-year old? Does anyone even believe in that stereotype any more?
More of our families and our friends are starting to discover the wonder of gaming. Are we justified in mocking them just because they get excited about different games and different genres? They're discovering the same joy we discovered when we first picked up a controller (or, for the PC gamers, a keyboard and mouse).
Gaming is growing up and it's time we grow up with it.
So to all the little sisters, to all the moms and dads, to all the grandma and grandpas: Come on in. There's room for all of us. You're welcome here.
And to the hardcore gamers: Show some love to the casual gamers. Because let's face it: Quite a few of us started our gaming careers running around as an Italian plumber, stomping on turtles, and eating mushrooms to get big. Do you have a leg to stand on when you make fun of Katamari Damacy?
Don't get me wrong: The hardcore gamers are welcome here, too, as long as they can "play nice" with the casual gamers. I'm just tired of all the arrogance surrounding the gaming community at large. I want to see some love for the casual gamers, and I wanted to start with me.
Get over yourselves.
Some people don't care that you can play Resistance: Fall of Man at 60 fps in 1080i. Most of the teenage girls playing Nintendogs don't even know what that means. Most of the elderly people enjoying Wii Bowling probably don't care.
Not everyone can afford or, alternatively, have parents that can afford the thousands of dollars for a big-screen HDTV, killer sound system, and Playstation 3 or Xbox 360. Similarly, not everyone can afford the latest video card and CPU for their gaming rig.
So keep on blogging about how that next-gen first-person shooter isn't going to be released for the Wii. Go ahead and call the Nintendo DS a "handheld for little girls." Don't stop mocking ideas upcoming games like Wii Fit on my behalf.
Go right ahead and keep whining. Just realize that the majority of the gaming industry is ignoring you completely.
Let the teenage girls have their Nintendogs games.
Let the elderly people enjoy their Wii Bowling tournaments.
Let the mothers in their thirties enjoy Bejeweled.
Let the anime nerds keep dancing to bad techno in DDR.
If you're going to play the latest and greatest "hardcore games," go right ahead. Just don't feel the need to bash anyone you consider "beneath" you.
As someone who used to tease his best friend for playing The Sims, I can say that I understand where you're coming from. Gaming, like the Internet, used to be dominated by nerds. Now your little sister has a DS, your grandma has a Wii at her retirement home, and your dad plays Halo with you now and then.
But is it really so bad that more people are learning to love gaming? Is it so awful when your parents stop talking about "those stupid video games" and pick up Wii Golf?
It's true; gaming is not solely the domain of nerds any more. But are we really missing much? Haven't we had enough of toilet humor, male posturing, and "zomgbbq thta's ghey!!!" forum posts? Isn't it time we shake the stereotype of the male gamer as a Caucasian, socially challenged 16-year old? Does anyone even believe in that stereotype any more?
More of our families and our friends are starting to discover the wonder of gaming. Are we justified in mocking them just because they get excited about different games and different genres? They're discovering the same joy we discovered when we first picked up a controller (or, for the PC gamers, a keyboard and mouse).
Gaming is growing up and it's time we grow up with it.
So to all the little sisters, to all the moms and dads, to all the grandma and grandpas: Come on in. There's room for all of us. You're welcome here.
And to the hardcore gamers: Show some love to the casual gamers. Because let's face it: Quite a few of us started our gaming careers running around as an Italian plumber, stomping on turtles, and eating mushrooms to get big. Do you have a leg to stand on when you make fun of Katamari Damacy?
Don't get me wrong: The hardcore gamers are welcome here, too, as long as they can "play nice" with the casual gamers. I'm just tired of all the arrogance surrounding the gaming community at large. I want to see some love for the casual gamers, and I wanted to start with me.