Most players don't use forums.
I'm in a fairly active guild of around 75 players. We have a guild website. I would say that about 4 members use the site on a regular basis, as in keeping up with new threads and responding to them a few times a week. There may be another 5 members who will respond to threads if they are important or who use the forum on an irregular basis. The rest of the guild either don't use the site or just look in to check the events calendar. They're happy just playing and enjoying the game and using the game chat to keep in touch with each other.
If I were to take the guild activity on the website as a sign of the game's activity, I would be worried.
And I don't particularly take the activity on here, the official website, as a sign of the game's activity. Far as I can tell only myself and one other from my guild bother coming here. And I know I've got a lot of time on my hands to do that. If I were more busy in and had less time for hobbies, I know I wouldn't bother.
ers101284b14_ESO wrote: »This is a much older generation of gamers who didn't grow up using forums and don't care to use them.
lordrichter wrote: »ers101284b14_ESO wrote: »This is a much older generation of gamers who didn't grow up using forums and don't care to use them.
Goodness. That is an interesting supposition. How many people in nursing homes do you think play this game?
Actually, I think the opposite of you. I think that the "much older" generation of gamers is more likely to use forums while the "barely out of diapers" ones tend to be less interested in forums. Forums are basically a modern version of the message area from an old dialup BBS and they really have not improved upon that concept very much. Definitely attractive to the older crowd. Definitely something that might be seen as "my Dad's internet" by the young upstarts.
I think that ESO is heavy in the "older generation" crowd due to the affiliation with Elder Scrolls.
As to "where is everyone", there are two answers, at least from my perspective, that are fairly obvious. The ESO forums, and many of the other related venues, have evolved into complaint areas and not a place where positive discussion can be done. This is not uncommon, but it does tend to be less useful to the general population.
The complaint crowd is also the most likely to take their marbles and go play elsewhere. They feed upon the negative energy and become quite vocal in the forum. Eventually, some of them pass into oblivion and suddenly the forum is really quiet because they are not posting. No one really notices WHO has left, they just notice the reduced volume in the room. It makes the forum seem artificially empty.
Former FidoNet point here. Let's have a 9600 baud connection handshake whistling contest.lordrichter wrote: »Forums are basically a modern version of the message area from an old dialup BBS and they really have not improved upon that concept very much. Definitely attractive to the older crowd. Definitely something that might be seen as "my Dad's internet" by the young upstarts.
I can fully agree to that, as I have been told exactly this to the face by a new customer, i.e. that forums are supposedly an outlet for complaints, first and foremost. Without having spent a single second in the game yet himself, he was nevertheless already complaining about problems he's read about in other people's threads. Sad but true.lordrichter wrote: »As to "where is everyone", there are two answers, at least from my perspective, that are fairly obvious. The ESO forums, and many of the other related venues, have evolved into complaint areas and not a place where positive discussion can be done. This is not uncommon, but it does tend to be less useful to the general population.