So as indicated by my recent article about E3, I'm getting mighty fed up of this antagonism toward games designed to appeal to a market that is different from you sitting there reading this article about gaming on a gaming forum in your gaming T-shirt.
I watched some E3 vids on GameTrailers and on TWO separate occasions two different people basically said "Nintendo's conference was for REAL gamers, Microsoft's wasn't," using the term "real gamers" and putting emphasis on the word "real" and very blatantly implying that people who enjoy the Kinect are idiots. While I THINK I know what they MEANT by this, taken at literal value this term is pointless. I watch movies but not ALL of the time every day and I don't stay up-to-date on upcoming movies and I don't go on internet forums to talk about movies and I don't wear movie T-shirts. Am I not a "REAL movie fan?" If someone tried to make that argument I'd be pissed off because I rather enjoy movies, very much, when I do watch them.
So I'm asking someone, anyone, to please define for me what a "REAL" or even "hardcore" gamer is. Because this is unsettling to me. My wife plays Ocean Party and Tetris and various puzzle games all of the damned time. So you can't say "they play video games a lot." And you can't say, "They play video games that aren't on Facebook" or "they play video games that don't suck" because that's a bulls*** argument. Just because a video game isn't similar in structure or content to something from the 80's doesn't make it less "real."
So I am dead serious, some one please define what "real gamer" means because if we can't actually DEFINE this phrase then we shouldn't be using it. I admit, I'm ashamed I rely on "casual" and "hardcore" as phrases because in the gaming world those words have become USELESS. They don't even MEAN anything anymore, they just have these implications, these general FEELINGS, not anything concrete. Everyone has their own interpretation, just like the word "art." Of course, the words themselves do have real definitions, but when applied to people who play video games, those meanings seem butchered and have "good" and "bad" connotations associated with them. For example, calling someone a "casual" as a noun has become an INSULT. WHY in God's name are people who have LIVES looked at as IDIOTS now?
People like Jeff Green or John Davison have families, they don't have all of the time in the world to play games, they play Lego ____ games with their kids. But they seem to thoroughly enjoy that. Would we not consider them "real" gamers if those were the only types of games they played, even if they played them regularly and paid attention to quality of design and enjoyed their time with them very much?
I guess I'm going a bit off topic here but this is calling to mind an argument my friend has made about the "games as art" debate. He says it's rubbish. Not because games are not quality products but because "art" has become a useless word because everyone applies their own definition to it. I have to admit, I've been trying to avoid the word ever since he pointed this out.
The whole basis of language is common understanding. If a word no longer has a common understanding, it becomes practically valueless. This is happening with word slike "casual," "hardcore" and even "gamer."
WTF is a GAMER, even? I always thought it was someone who plays video games. Meaning my wife is a gamer because she plays lots of flash games. My brother is a gamer 'cuz he plays MLB video games and MLB video games alone. My other brother COLLECTS games and rarely plays them but he DOES play them.
The problem? We as the online gaming community at large, would not prescribe the term "gamer" to these people. This is because we have taken what is SUPPOSED to be a general term and applied to it a specific type of definition (which, mind you, isn't even concrete). Moviegoers watch movies. READERS read books. Gamers play games. It doesn't matter how much you do these actions or what GENRE of content you're consuming. While you are doing it, you are that noun.
So once people starting playing games that did not fit this kind of oddly specific definition that we've prescribed to the word "gamer," we felt the need to come up with a new word. That word is "hardcore." Now that other people with different tastes than ours play video games, we felt the need to segregate to maintain our "gamer culture," our "gamer pride," so we felt compelled to separate ourselves as "hardcore" and "casual."
But get this. People we classify as "casual" has their OWN word (and many still do) for what we call "hardcore." That word is "nerd." The word "nerd" for the longest time had a negative connotation, but now it's starting to get a positive one. "Hardcore" is a word than intimidates many people but now it's lost its edge. Why? Because we now apply it to everyone who likes old-fashioned formats of games. Traditional video game formats. Unfortunately that means the value of the word "hardcore" is kind of demeaned even further, because the whole purpose of the word in the first place was to describe a minuscule minority. People like Keith Apicary, who actively collect old game systems and freaking velcro them to their bodies. If we're ALL "hardcore" then the word "hardcore" has lost it's damned meaning.
So let's look this crap up, a la
http://www.merriam-webster.com/Hardcore:
1 : a central or fundamental and usually enduring group or part: as a : a relatively small enduring core of society marked by apparent resistance to change or inability to escape a persistent wretched condition (as poverty or chronic unemployment) b : a militant or fiercely loyal faction
(haha, I love that bit about "wretched condition," as I think there are many many jaded people out there)
Casual:
1 : subject to, resulting from, or occurring by chance <a casual meeting>
2 a : occurring without regularity : occasional <casual employment> b : employed for irregular periods <a casual worker> c : met with on occasion and known only superficially <a casual friend>
3 a (1) : feeling or showing little concern : nonchalant <a casual approach to cooking> (2) : lacking a high degree of interest or devotion <casual sports fans> <casual readers> (3) : done without serious intent or commitment <casual sex> b (1) : informal, natural <a casual conversation> (2) : designed for informal use <casual clothing>
If we're actually using the LITERAL definitions of these words, I am not a hardcore OR a casual gamer. I am neither. But I am NOT inbetween, either. I am NOT resistant to change, I embrace it. I play video games with great regularity and not by chance.
My wife probably plays almost as much video games as I do. They just happen to be flash games. Implying that she's some idiot or retard and treating her like she's a "poison that is killing the industry" is immature and rude.
ANYWAY. Sorry, I know I'm rambling. Helps to process thoughts in my own head I guess. Hopefully SOMETHING from that stream of consciousness made some sense.
Point is, it's not even the technical literal meaning of these words that's the issue, it's the fact that we take a word that means one thing and twist it and give it a negative connotation that we use to put ourselves above others.
When people talk about "casual crap" they imply that something like Nintendogs is worthless even though it's very well made.
What a word technically means and the meaning we end up twisting it into can be a big deal. The words "MODS BAN ME PLEASE" and "gay" say "hello."
Anyway, he whole reason I even give a damn about any of this is:
If we as the community that is passionate about this medium, WHATEVER we want to call ourselves, actively resist change and insult and demean anyone or anything that comes along that is different and TREAT it like it's inherently worthless, we are robbing ourselves of a future where the medium we love is enjoyed by everyone of all tastes.
We are also robbing ourselves of future non-traditional experiences like REZ, Flower, and Shadow of the Colossus.