I do not consider anyone a "pro player".Pro is short for professional,and no one in the game gets paid to play it so they arent Pros.To call them that is to feed their egos,and they already have pretty good sized ones.
That term and "casualk" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
I do not consider anyone a "pro player".Pro is short for professional,and no one in the game gets paid to play it so they arent Pros.To call them that is to feed their egos,and they already have pretty good sized ones.
That term and "casualk" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
That term and "casual" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
Bonzodog01 wrote: »Some of you lot should come play the console servers for a while. Casual city. People discover the game, play it like crazy for 3 or 4 weeks...ooh look, new title is out! Off we go...
3 to 4 weeks later they come back and continue playing this game until the next new shiny comes out. Plus people are more inclined to use a console as a mere device, so they might play for 2 hours, log, then come back 2 hours later for another hour or so.
lordrichter wrote: »That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
lordrichter wrote: »That term and "casual" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
BlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
Hallothiel wrote: »@Volkodav
After reading through all the posts & thought about what's been said & my own approach - how about the term 'regular' gamer?
Play when I can but can play for hours at a time when I can. Care about crafting. Prefer solo questing & exploring as that is the gameplay I'm used to but have to admit have enjoyed when have ad-hoc teamed up with someone random to quest / kill a boss. Like it that some things are hard and so I have to go away & have a think about what to do differently. Scared witless by reports on here about PVP / dungeons and having the right build / knowledge of gameplay etc so avoid at present as sounds too much like hard work but do not under any circumstances want it made easier just so I could do it.
Mostly this is a game I play for relaxation & enjoyment & a bit of a challenge but don't get my knickers in a twist about being the best.
Quite like the term 'regular'.
One thing people keep forgett is that as Smileybones say "What people need to understand is that people with limited playtime are a big part of playerbase now and this have many consequences." and which many "pro player" keep forgett which is are even more import is that the so call "casual gamers" is the one the normal spend more money in game like ESO.
Sure a "casual gamers" have limited playtime but it normal have to do with that work and therefore can keep spend more money on buy thing in crown store.
I can say i went from pro gamer in mmo to a casual gamer in mmo for back in -99 to -08 at the end of The Burning Crusade (WoW 1st expansion) i play between 8 to 16 hours all most very day back then i have only parttime jobs and no girlfriend but somewhere in The Burning Crusade i meet my girl of my dream which im live with now and but by that time i was so hook on play so it was more import them anything else almost i would say i was addiction to playing mmo.
But my girlfriend help out off it and today i have fulltime job and both me and my girlfriend basically only play few hours on weekend if we have time for it but i guess my point is that even pro gamer that play mmo can trun in to addiction for you only want to be best and have best item and honest i would not recommend spend so much time with one game.
I would say it is way better to be a "casual gamer" then a "pro gamer" for get more out of life
BlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
I understand that you consider yourself casual.Cool.
However,what would you call the person who plays every day for several hours,even up to five? Ones who arent into PvP,and just play that long because they have the time and get lost in the gameplay?
There should be a name for us,..since we dont fit the term "casual" in that we play a lot of our time.
(not being snarky,just wondering. I promise)
One thing people keep forgett is that as Smileybones say "What people need to understand is that people with limited playtime are a big part of playerbase now and this have many consequences." and which many "pro player" keep forgett which is are even more import is that the so call "casual gamers" is the one the normal spend more money in game like ESO.
Sure a "casual gamers" have limited playtime but it normal have to do with that work and therefore can keep spend more money on buy thing in crown store.
I can say i went from pro gamer in mmo to a casual gamer in mmo for back in -99 to -08 at the end of The Burning Crusade (WoW 1st expansion) i play between 8 to 16 hours all most very day back then i have only parttime jobs and no girlfriend but somewhere in The Burning Crusade i meet my girl of my dream which im live with now and but by that time i was so hook on play so it was more import them anything else almost i would say i was addiction to playing mmo.
But my girlfriend help out off it and today i have fulltime job and both me and my girlfriend basically only play few hours on weekend if we have time for it but i guess my point is that even pro gamer that play mmo can trun in to addiction for you only want to be best and have best item and honest i would not recommend spend so much time with one game.
I would say it is way better to be a "casual gamer" then a "pro gamer" for get more out of lifeBlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
I understand that you consider yourself casual.Cool.
However,what would you call the person who plays every day for several hours,even up to five? Ones who arent into PvP,and just play that long because they have the time and get lost in the gameplay?
There should be a name for us,..since we dont fit the term "casual" in that we play a lot of our time.
(not being snarky,just wondering. I promise)
You need to break casual and hardcore down into two elements.
Mindset & hours logged
You can be casual or hardcore at either.
I'm hardcore mindset, casual hours
Your casual mindset, hardcore hours
One thing people keep forgett is that as Smileybones say "What people need to understand is that people with limited playtime are a big part of playerbase now and this have many consequences." and which many "pro player" keep forgett which is are even more import is that the so call "casual gamers" is the one the normal spend more money in game like ESO.
Sure a "casual gamers" have limited playtime but it normal have to do with that work and therefore can keep spend more money on buy thing in crown store.
I can say i went from pro gamer in mmo to a casual gamer in mmo for back in -99 to -08 at the end of The Burning Crusade (WoW 1st expansion) i play between 8 to 16 hours all most very day back then i have only parttime jobs and no girlfriend but somewhere in The Burning Crusade i meet my girl of my dream which im live with now and but by that time i was so hook on play so it was more import them anything else almost i would say i was addiction to playing mmo.
But my girlfriend help out off it and today i have fulltime job and both me and my girlfriend basically only play few hours on weekend if we have time for it but i guess my point is that even pro gamer that play mmo can trun in to addiction for you only want to be best and have best item and honest i would not recommend spend so much time with one game.
I would say it is way better to be a "casual gamer" then a "pro gamer" for get more out of lifeBlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
I understand that you consider yourself casual.Cool.
However,what would you call the person who plays every day for several hours,even up to five? Ones who arent into PvP,and just play that long because they have the time and get lost in the gameplay?
There should be a name for us,..since we dont fit the term "casual" in that we play a lot of our time.
(not being snarky,just wondering. I promise)
You need to break casual and hardcore down into two elements.
Mindset & hours logged
You can be casual or hardcore at either.
I'm hardcore mindset, casual hours
Your casual mindset, hardcore hours
Hallothiel and I have decided we are "Regular Gamers".Dont like the term casual,so we're going for a better term.
I have tons of hours to play,and do so every day.
So what would that make me going by your ideas?
To me,a "casual" is simply someone who realizes there are more important things in life than what happens in a game
newtinmpls wrote: »lordrichter wrote: »That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
I think it was during the question of CP caps that ZoS came out and said they will make choices based on where the "middle" of the playerbase is.
Which, if you are postulating that the "ends of the spectrum" are casual vs hardcore - neither is the model that ZoS uses.
lordrichter wrote: »That term and "casual" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
I would bet that ZOS doesnt even think about the word "casual" when thinking about their player base.Casuals are those players who havent the time to play for a long time.They can only get in time between their work and families. Those other players who do have the time to spend ingame for longer periods arent casual.They can invest time and effort to improve their characters.
They arent casual players at all.
FelixTheCatt wrote: »Just to play devils advocate a sec , saying hardcore players have "no life" is just as rude as saying casual players are noobs with no skill. Regardless of how much or how little we play , aren't we all just gamers at the end of the day?
DaveMoeDee wrote: »I see 2 different definitions in this thread.
1 - Casual plays less time
2 - Casual is less competitive
These are completely different things. People can play a lot of hours and not care about competition. Likewise, people can be competitive about PvP, for example, but only play a few hours a week if they are focusing on 1v1 fights.
Ultimately, the term casual is meant to be dismissive of a group of people to make the people using the term feel superior and to project the idea that there opinion is more virtuous. If people are using the term, it may be wiser to just ignore them rather than try to figure out who they are referring to.
BlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
I understand that you consider yourself casual.Cool.
However,what would you call the person who plays every day for several hours,even up to five? Ones who arent into PvP,and just play that long because they have the time and get lost in the gameplay?
There should be a name for us,..since we dont fit the term "casual" in that we play a lot of our time.
(not being snarky,just wondering. I promise)
lordrichter wrote: »newtinmpls wrote: »lordrichter wrote: »That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
I think it was during the question of CP caps that ZoS came out and said they will make choices based on where the "middle" of the playerbase is.
Which, if you are postulating that the "ends of the spectrum" are casual vs hardcore - neither is the model that ZoS uses.
I am merely saying that they make business decisions and design the game with the "casual player" in mind, but don't forget that I also said that this is not the only demographic.
I am not sure that I consider "hard core" and "casual" to be opposite ends of the same line, by the way.lordrichter wrote: »That term and "casual" are both just stupid names to call players.Just my opinion,again.
That might be, but I am pretty sure that ZOS makes business decisions and game direction decision based on their perception of what is a "casual" player. It might not be that name, and it is not their only demographic that they use to make decisions, but I am certain that it exists. We would all recognize this player if they ever told us all about "him".
I would bet that ZOS doesnt even think about the word "casual" when thinking about their player base.Casuals are those players who havent the time to play for a long time.They can only get in time between their work and families. Those other players who do have the time to spend ingame for longer periods arent casual.They can invest time and effort to improve their characters.
They arent casual players at all.
Actually, I am fairly confident that they pay attention to "casuals", but they may not call them that. I call them Homework Dads, based on a statement made during the Tamriel Unlimited stream.
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/comment/1544101/#Comment_1544101
NordSwordnBoard wrote: »Hardcores are more likely to get emotionally invested in the game due to how much they put in. I understand anger and frustration when careless players hobble your gameplay. You put in time and time is money. A certain return on the investment is expected.
One thing people keep forgett is that as Smileybones say "What people need to understand is that people with limited playtime are a big part of playerbase now and this have many consequences." and which many "pro player" keep forgett which is are even more import is that the so call "casual gamers" is the one the normal spend more money in game like ESO.
Sure a "casual gamers" have limited playtime but it normal have to do with that work and therefore can keep spend more money on buy thing in crown store.
I can say i went from pro gamer in mmo to a casual gamer in mmo for back in -99 to -08 at the end of The Burning Crusade (WoW 1st expansion) i play between 8 to 16 hours all most very day back then i have only parttime jobs and no girlfriend but somewhere in The Burning Crusade i meet my girl of my dream which im live with now and but by that time i was so hook on play so it was more import them anything else almost i would say i was addiction to playing mmo.
But my girlfriend help out off it and today i have fulltime job and both me and my girlfriend basically only play few hours on weekend if we have time for it but i guess my point is that even pro gamer that play mmo can trun in to addiction for you only want to be best and have best item and honest i would not recommend spend so much time with one game.
I would say it is way better to be a "casual gamer" then a "pro gamer" for get more out of lifeBlitzGirl41 wrote: »Ah, yes, this topic... In every gaming forum I frequent, be it the Bethesda or Halo forums, this always pops up.
Even if the terms "hardcore" and "casual" are not necessarily negative, it is unfortunate that plenty of people out there truly do use such terms as derogatory insults - "casual" more often than any other label, I've noticed. In the end, the terms are only what you define them as.
Personally, I consider myself a casual gamer, and I am not embarrassed to admit it. Mostly because I do not see anything negative about being casual. I don't have the free time to put hours into a game, and therefore I don't go around running dungeons or doing PvP, because those things take more time than going about questing. As many other people have pointed out, for those of us who do consider ourselves "casuals", gaming is a means to relax after the end of a long day of work or school.
That being said, I don't agree with people wanting to force the developers to make a game insanely easy, even if I struggle with some things in games at times. There needs to be a balance.
I understand that you consider yourself casual.Cool.
However,what would you call the person who plays every day for several hours,even up to five? Ones who arent into PvP,and just play that long because they have the time and get lost in the gameplay?
There should be a name for us,..since we dont fit the term "casual" in that we play a lot of our time.
(not being snarky,just wondering. I promise)
You need to break casual and hardcore down into two elements.
Mindset & hours logged
You can be casual or hardcore at either.
I'm hardcore mindset, casual hours
Your casual mindset, hardcore hours
Hallothiel and I have decided we are "Regular Gamers".Dont like the term casual,so we're going for a better term.
I have tons of hours to play,and do so every day.
So what would that make me going by your ideas?
Casual mindset, hardcore hours.
Difference in terms of time investment
Casual= Value short gaming time per session
Midcore=Value medium gaming time per session
Hardcore= Value long gaming time per session
Difference in terms of learning in game and outside game
Casual= Value time with minimal learning and just enjoying
Midcore= Value time learning good fundamentals but don't want a degree in mmo 101
Hardcore= Value time learning everything about a game
Difference in terms of skill
Cerebral= Master knowledge of game systems and how to manipulate them
Reflex= Quick hand dexterity during execution of any systems they know the rules to
Alliance= Forming bonds with the right people to accomplish goals or increase fun
Difference in terms of dominant mindset
Casual= Fun and enjoyment above all else
Midcore=Fun and enjoyment with a decent-good degree of challenge required
Elite= Fun and enjoyment, loves super difficulty, with the ends being most important
Going down in order of my interpretations I consider myself:
2
3
Kind of 1&3(my reflexes and knowledge aren't the sharpest or most exhaustive)
2