Rebornlogic wrote: »Elitism is what is meant to be in any MMO,
If I want to say something I say it, I don't beat around the bush. I didn't say nor did I imply that. You're cherry picking as well as twisting and misinterpreting what I wrote. The tactical planning involved in chess is strictly limited to chess, you can't apply those exact strategies in any other facet of your life. This is the same with a slight improvement in mouse click reaction times, it's pretty much limited to that singular neural pathway, there's minimal transfer to other physical reaction times. They're objectively impractical, and fun has nothing to do with the argument in this context since we're discussing people who play to win not for entertainment.You are trying to say that typing experience, tactical planning in chess and improved reaction times are objectively 'worse' skills to develop than the ability to entertain others. I think you'll struggle to make that stick.
Again, you're twisting my words. I never said nor implied anything of the sort; you've interpreted that all by yourself. When it comes to gamers and youtubers who get paid to play/stream; it's their job and I don't blame them for being competitive and they're exempt from anything I said previously.You're then trying to monetise experience and use that as a measure, but that's not a good idea, some professional gamers/Youtubers are richer than you or I will ever be.
It depends on the criteria you measure the experiences with. So you didn't get into motorsports to beat other people, great!It's simply not possible to objectively mark one experience as 'better' than any other. e.g. I started participating in motorsport simply because of the thrill of driving performance cars incredibly quickly,
Sure, winning feels great, who doesn't like winning? But an individual who does something solely to win has issues and is guaranteed to end up disappointed. Even if they become the world champion they'll end up being replaced eventually and no longer be the best, then what? No more winning, no more being better than other people at given activity, no more superficial happiness.for many people the thrill of winning a computer or chess game is equally worth pursuing.
So you didn't get into music to be the best musician with that particular instrument, and you didn't get into your tech career to be the most knowledgeable figure on the subject. See where I'm going with this? You've done all of these things for all the right reasons, and that's great. The issue lies with people who play video games solely to win in order to compensate for other areas of their life that are lacking.I started playing and producing music simply to give an outlet to something inside of me. I even started my career purely because I was fasincated by technology, the fact I made a lot of money out of it is a mere side-effect, and didn't even factor into my thinking, I simply pursed avenues I loved and happened to excel at.
And I stand by that.AMadAussie wrote: »If you play solely for the purpose of "being good" and are so competitive that you just have to win and beat everyone else, that speaks volumes about your inadequacies and insecurities in the rest of your life.
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
so i though about it and here is what i came up with.
1. non competitive.
A. Well why are you even playing any video game? gaming has always been about achievements/being good/making yourself better.
2. play the game anyway you like and be accepted by anyone.
A. so if your running 2-3k dps running vAA. that means your going to make it were you cant clear the run unless the others "carry" you pushing 30+k dps
3. arguing that the game should be the way you feel it should be
A. why should it be the way you want it to be? i'm pretty sure you didn't invest into the game management. so let management decide whats best (after all THEY created the game)
this isn't meant to be insulting if you took it that way and are a "casual gamer"
Elitism is what is meant to be in any MMO, just look at achievments you get rewards for completing "hard" or "not so hard" tasks
if your playing any game there's no such thing as "casual gamer" in any mmo you play. think about anyway you set a goal that's hard to reach and play towards that goal. so by you attempting to reach that goal you now become a elitist that strives to get better.
just some reading that makes very logical sense for people that are (sober)
The "elitists" are the ones who seem to be insisting that the game be made the way they think it should be. If you aren't teh uberest 100k million dps totally untouchable juggernaut of destruction, they don't want you in their group, and probably wouldn't talk to you if they could possibly manage it.
Rebornlogic wrote: »gaming has always been about achievements/being good/making yourself better.
DigitalShibby wrote: »I think casual isn't a word used to reflect how you approach the game but the time you have to spend. Someone who works 5 days a week and only gets to play on weekends can play the game with a "hardcore" mentality where they focus on improving, end game, and min maxing their builds but with only two days a week to play they call themselves casual.
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
so i though about it and here is what i came up with.
1. non competitive.
A. Well why are you even playing any video game? gaming has always been about achievements/being good/making yourself better.
2. play the game anyway you like and be accepted by anyone.
A. so if your running 2-3k dps running vAA. that means your going to make it were you cant clear the run unless the others "carry" you pushing 30+k dps
3. arguing that the game should be the way you feel it should be
A. why should it be the way you want it to be? i'm pretty sure you didn't invest into the game management. so let management decide whats best (after all THEY created the game)
this isn't meant to be insulting if you took it that way and are a "casual gamer"
Elitism is what is meant to be in any MMO, just look at achievments you get rewards for completing "hard" or "not so hard" tasks
if your playing any game there's no such thing as "casual gamer" in any mmo you play. think about anyway you set a goal that's hard to reach and play towards that goal. so by you attempting to reach that goal you now become a elitist that strives to get better.
just some reading that makes very logical sense for people that are (sober)
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
Its a misused or more specifically, misunderstood term. Most don't understand its origins because they weren't playing MMORPGs when it was being used (Pre-WoW).
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
Its a misused or more specifically, misunderstood term. Most don't understand its origins because they weren't playing MMORPGs when it was being used (Pre-WoW).
People were using those terms in the MUD days, long before Everquest or MMORPG's ever existed.
Rebornlogic wrote: »im very curious about the "casual gamer" slang going around. what entails this "casual gamer" tag.
so i though about it and here is what i came up with.
1. non competitive.
A. Well why are you even playing any video game? gaming has always been about achievements/being good/making yourself better.