I'll be 50 next year and I think you have it backwards. Older gamers (such as myself) don't have a problem with the company's monetization practices, because we have more disposable income than college-age people.
And speaking purely for myself here, I have plenty of time for gaming now that the kids have left home and it's just myself and my wife hanging out in the evenings after work.
I suspect you have it all the wrong way round. As an older player (I'm 70) and ex-EQ player I actually have more time to play because I'm retired. I'm not bothered by "the game company's monetisation practices" (we can each define them differently) because the switch from subscription-only to optional subscription/crown store made not a jot of difference to how I play the game. I have subscribed throughout the game's life and if there are a few things in the crown store I want (such as the occasional house given that I have no interest in the trader system and therefore don't have the gold with which to buy houses ingame) that is covered by the subscription crowns.
I play both multiple MMORPGs and offline single player games, and have done for many years. I don't discuss politics in any game, I suspect that's down to younger players mainly, and for some years now have disabled zone chat because there's nothing in it that is of interest to me. Politics, trolling, spammed selling, spammed guild promotion? My epeen is bigger than yours? No thanks, not interested. Likely to be younger players again. The Zone English channel is all I need to ask the odd question or give the odd answer.
As to whether the game is outdated, that's increasingly not the case in my view. Older games like EQ were a challenge, they took time to achieve anything worthwhile, and players respected that - leveling didn't happen all that often and when it did it really meant something. I wish that ESO was more like that, even if it meant you thought it was outdated, but the reality is that most changes trivialise the game even more as it adapts to the "I want everything without any effort or payment and I want it NOW" breed of gamer. If anything, ESO is moving with the times too much for my liking!
AlextheMuspel wrote: »Again, as someone who has hundreds of games on steam, consoles, and portable consoles, gaming has evolved SO MUCH beyond the MMORPG genre. For anyone who plays games outside of the MMORPG genre, it's clear as crystal how some of the systems in ESO are outdated. "Other MMORPG did the same thing" is not a valid excuse anymore. Unless MMORPG is the only genre that player ever played, for decades even.
AlextheMuspel wrote: »Again, as someone who has hundreds of games on steam, consoles, and portable consoles, gaming has evolved SO MUCH beyond the MMORPG genre. For anyone who plays games outside of the MMORPG genre, it's clear as crystal how some of the systems in ESO are outdated. "Other MMORPG did the same thing" is not a valid excuse anymore. Unless MMORPG is the only genre that player ever played, for decades even.
First, I don't think it has anything to do with age, other than age provides more opportunity to see different sorts of games, game monetization methods, and ways of designing and building games.
ZOS made it clear early on that this game was going to go the direction they wanted, and not follow genre tropes blindly. I don't think it is "outdated" as much as "not following the herd". It is a little refreshing, actually.
As for monetization, I have no really objection to cash shops, so long as they are not selling preference or shortcuts. I want to be able to play the game with everyone else and not have the cash shop involved. Cosmetics and non-game-play stuff are fine, for games that are not built on that. The ESO cash shop sells shortcuts, so no, not a fan of the ESO cash shop.
Crown Crates can rot in hell. I see them as an analog of the villains from so many fairy tales, luring the children (figuratively speaking) with candy and cakes.Loot boxes have no place in games, unless that is the purpose of the game.
I don't think age has all that much to do with what one tolerates. If one was to generalize; older people have had more time to conclude what they are willing to deal with. While younger people just except the situation. Of course since it's a generalization it's probably wrong anyway. Just like the statistics from super data are probably wrong.
I have always gotten a laugh out of the thought that there weren't any "Old" gamers in whatever game I was playing. Gaming as it is today got here because of the old timers. You don't really think that they stopped playing do you? No, they're just continuing to have fun. Without telling everyone that they are here.
I decided at a young age that if growing up was becoming old and cranky like my dad and his cronies, I just wasn't going to do it. At 57 I still get comments about it and it makes me happy.... lol
AlextheMuspel wrote: »As far as I'm aware, there's a large portion of players above 40 years-old in the ESO community. According to superdata, the average age for a mmorpg gamer in 2016 is 33. As for ESO, it is safe to assume that the Elder Scrolls IP potentially contributed to the older population's interest in the game.
As someone who's in the 18-24 age group, I can definitely feel the age gap sometimes, no matter in the game or on forum. Sometimes I wonder how old those who "debate" about irl politics in the zone chats are. Moreover, a LOT of players seem to come from the EQ era, meaning that they've probably played this genre for decades. They seem more tolerable towards the game company's monetization practices. I thought about why this is the case, and I came up with the following answer: they probably don't have much time to devote to gaming. At the moment, ESO is possibly the only game that they regularly play now, so their tolerance is higher.
Again, as someone who has hundreds of games on steam, consoles, and portable consoles, gaming has evolved SO MUCH beyond the MMORPG genre. For anyone who plays games outside of the MMORPG genre, it's clear as crystal how some of the systems in ESO are outdated. "Other MMORPG did the same thing" is not a valid excuse anymore. Unless MMORPG is the only genre that player ever played, for decades even.
Open for discussion: how does the age gap affect you as a younger/older player in ESO?
AlextheMuspel wrote: »What I was saying is exactly that older players are more tolerable towards monetization practices.