This Just In - Gamers Are Human 247
A new study by the Entertainment Software Association reveals that, amazingly, gamers are regular human beings. The study shows that avid game players are just as religious, artistic, and social as anyone else. From the article: "Gamers are everywhere and they're everyone. They are your friends, neighbors, co-workers, relatives, and kids, they lead responsible and caring lives, balancing their enjoyment of interactive entertainment with many other activities important to a well-rounded lifestyle...Indeed, those who continue to portray the game population as single-minded loafers are living in their own fantasy world."
I am? (Score:5, Funny)
Something I've noticed (Score:5, Interesting)
While it was kind of hypocritical, it is cool because the result since has been that the image of a gamer is more mainstream now. In fact, I've noticed a lot more older gamers these days, which is natural since the people who first played Super Mario Bros. in the 80s are grown adults now, often with families, who still follow gaming. But I think the barriers of age, social class, and so on have kind of broken down. Though you still have gamers even other gamers won't touch, like EQ2 players.
All in all, though I think gaming companies are in trouble, the gamer is doing pretty well these days. And yes, we are human.
My god I'm old (Score:3, Funny)
When I was a kid, if you wanted to chat via text, you had to put it on a 5 1/2" floppy written in Basic and pass it to your friend. Sure there was IRC, but you had to hook up your 9600 baud modem to make it work.
I have been a gamer though throughout. Back then it was Brickout and Lode Runner. For me today it is SOCOM II (I am biased against Halo) and Doom and various RTS computer games. In my experience, the most successful games are 'soc
Re:My god I'm old (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My god I'm old (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:3, Funny)
Ahh, Adventure. Played that one all the time, I did. And I tied and onion to my pants, which was the fashion at the time...
*snore*
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:2)
How about those of us who played Collossal Cave and Zork? Or listened to Bunkner & Garcia's "Pac Man Fever" when it was Top-40? Or can immediately remember, with crystal clarity, the sound the marching Space Invaders made as they trudged across the screen ..
Yep, we're old now.
Re:Could this work? (Score:4, Funny)
Could this work?
[prompt]
>north
The Troll Room
This is a small room with passages to the east and south and a forbidding hole leading west. Bloodstains and deep scratches (perhaps made by an axe) mar the walls.
A nasty-looking troll, brandishing a bloody axe, blocks all passages out of the room.
>moderate troll -1
The troll vanish, humiliated by your geekdom superpowers.
>
[/prompt]
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:2)
Do you have any idea how hard it is to dance the Charleston when you have
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember having one particularly vicious depressive fit one dark winter day. My solution was to go out and purchase a copy of Syphon Filter 2 for Playstation and play through the game in it's entirety in one sitting. A bit extreme, perhaps, but from that strangely cathartic experience I concluded that there's something potentially constructive in becoming engrossed in a video game to the extent that a negative mental trip has no place to reside and fe
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:2)
First console: Pong
First cartrige console: 2600
First "portable" game system: Vectrex
First IM: 300 baud modem connection to friend's computer
First admin job: maintained WildCat! BBS for employer
I'm only 31 but I feel real old after saying that. The upside: I still game a lot, only this time I can afford a good PC and all the consoles and games my heart desires.
Re:Something I've noticed (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not just ok to be a geek. It's encouraged. You have an entire billion-dollar industry striving to make computer games cool. Why? Because games drive the industry. Newer, cooler games demand faster, more powerful computers. Faster computers demand more memory, new OSs, etc etc. Faster computers allow game developers to push the limts even further, and around the circle turns. Nobody wouldn't buy a whole new computer to run Office 2004, but they would to be able to play Halo 2.
Man... (Score:5, Funny)
Are they sure? (Score:2)
Re:I am? (Score:2)
Re:I am? (Score:2)
Lethal Weapon Quote: Joe Pesci "But, but, your black!"
But I'm evil, or so I thought... (Score:1)
Caring and responsible lives? I thought playing games like GTA were rotting my brain and teaching me to kill indiscriminately [christiananswers.net]. Whatevah. Who actually *reads* these "family-friendly" reviews?
Re:But I'm evil, or so I thought... (Score:2)
Re:But I'm evil, or so I thought... (Score:4, Insightful)
I like the quote at the end, " it makes no allowances for the Christian gamer. " Like they expected Rock Star games to have you witness at the end and find Jesus. Lol.
But seriously, they didn't berate the game, they didn't complain that it was killing society, and why won't someone think of the children? An altogether responsible review. No, I don't agree with their outlook, but I don't see anything wrong with it. As long as they aren't trying to keep ME from playing it.
Re:But I'm evil, or so I thought... (Score:2)
I like the quote at the end, " it makes no allowances for the Christian gamer. " Like they expected Rock Star games to have you witness at the end and find Jesus. Lol.
How dare they not pander to their special-interest group! ; )
Re:But I'm evil, or so I thought... (Score:2)
That's great (Score:2, Funny)
Re:That's great (Score:1)
Now if only someone could convince my wife...
I've been there. Unfortunately the only option open to you is divorce, it worked for me.
Re:That's great (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's great (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That's great (Score:2)
My wife is both competetive AND a bad loser :P
Slashdot readers are like comedians... (Score:2)
I disagree (Score:1)
No... ya think? (Score:1)
Re:No... ya think? (Score:2)
*faint sound of bubble bursting in the background*
well ... (Score:2, Insightful)
Also... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Also... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Also... (Score:3, Insightful)
Knowing that Games in general are not a subset of the population means that we are a demographic which can be a good thing as companies start thinking of us a targe audience.
This might mean more games.
It also might mean more advertising in game :-/
Re:Also... (Score:4, Insightful)
What?!? Run that by me again. How does not ebing a subset of the population make one into a demographic? It's that what a demographic IS? A category to put someone in? Hence, a SUBSET?
Re:Also... (Score:2)
Currently we are categorized as "people who live in their mother's basement and annoy comic book store owners with long arguments about Wolverine vs. Spiderman".
I must have been drinking when I posted the original -- I don't usually have a dozen spelling mistakes either :-)
Re:Also... (Score:2)
cynically (Score:2)
This might mean more games.
Like hell.
What it'll probably mean is more gamer-oriented ads for chips and soft drinks.
Mario gets home after a long day of eating mushrooms and popy-flowers and goes to the fridge for band-y sugar-loaded carbonated water, stuff like that.
Being a demographic just means that they are figuring out ways to get at your wallet, not to provide you with quality products. Just effective
Re:Also... (Score:2)
Penny Arcade commented [penny-arcade.com] on this a while ago. The situation remains unchanged.
Re:Also... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Also... (Score:2)
Re:Also... (Score:2)
3) Chickens are just birds!
Oh, yeah? When did you see another bird to dumb to fly away when given a chance or a Kentucky Fried Pigeon? Oh, wait a sec . . . the original comparison was between gamers and regular people . . . never mind, I take it back. Just us birds here. :>
Ominous (Score:2)
This sounds more ominous in print that I think was its intention. It's the pod people! Or iPod people, maybe?
Re:Ominous (Score:2)
By doing this, the goal could be to do one of two things:
A. Force them to see (even if they won't acknowledge it) the fact that gamers are not bad people. They're everywhere, we all have contact with them. You don't realize it because they're exactly the same as anybody else. There are just so many of them that even a miniscu
Did society invert nerds and 'normal' people? (Score:2, Funny)
covert to become a gamer? (Score:1)
Crap, maybe I should become a gamer afterall.
It's a conspiracy (Score:2)
Re:It's a conspiracy (Score:3, Funny)
I resent that. (Score:2)
I am a mushroom-eating, fireball spitting, red-blooded plumber!
We have feelings too.
Re:I resent that. (Score:3, Funny)
Amazing.... (Score:1)
Re:Amazing.... (Score:2)
Oh, right. (Score:2)
Finally!! (Score:1)
I noticed somethinmg missing (Score:2)
Sixty-one percent of game players engage in some type of religious activity for several hours each month.
Ninety-three percent of game players read books or daily newspapers, while sixty-two percent often attend cultural events, such as concerts, museums, or the theater.
Fifty percent spend time painting, writing, or playing an instrument.
Ninety-four percent follow news and current events, and 78 percent report that they vote i
zerg (Score:2)
well (Score:2)
--
You have been warned. Do not touch my danish again.
Enough (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, really.
> The study shows that avid game players are just as religious, artistic, and social as anyone else.
I'm a tolerant dude, and all, but...
> From the article: "Gamers are everywhere and they're everyone. They are your friends, neighbors, co-workers, relatives, and kids, they lead responsible and caring lives, balancing their enjoyment of interactive entertainment with many other activities important to a well-rounded lifestyle...
> Indeed, those who continue to portray the game population as single-minded loafers are living in their own fantasy world."
Speak for yourselves (Score:2)
Obviously (Score:2)
Now, Slashdotters, on the other hand....
And in other news, 95% of gamers are liars..... (Score:2)
But.. But.. (Score:2)
All this time chasing the perfect stereotype, ruined!
Straw man down! (Score:5, Insightful)
We get a story like this ("Many Gamers Not Psychopaths!" or "Games Good For A Small Part Of Your Brain!") twice a week, always with this triumphant spin as though something significant has been rebutted.
Re:Straw man down! (Score:3, Funny)
It's to accompany the "senile politician/lawyer attempts to ban videogames" stories we also get twice a week.
Re:Straw man down! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Straw man down! (Score:2)
In der n00z (Score:2, Funny)
"Gamers Are Human Beings!"--announces Industry Group
"People with money are people"--reveals Las Vegas Visitors Bureau
"Bill O'Riley isn't an evil git"--proclaims his mum
"Gays aren't people, too!"--admits Karl Rove
"Moderators are nearly human"--slashdot
"first posters are fairly human"--slashdot
"A sufficiently patched hack-job is indistinguishable from actual security until later notice"--Microsoft rolling out any new release
"Will Eisner, still dead."--everyone BUT slashdot
Lacking information. (Score:3, Insightful)
This article doesn't seem especially informative. It basically just says that gamers spend more time non-gaming than they do gaming, and that they participate in many of the most common mainstream activities.
What it doesn't provide, however, is any comparison to statistics for non-gamers, including obesity rates and total time spent partipating in cultural events.
It also doesn't provide definitions for many of its activities. Does "theater" include "movie theater"? Does "daily newspaper" include Slashdot?
No, we really need more information...
Sex (Score:2)
Is sex a religious, creative, or cultural activity?
Re:Sex (Score:2)
All of the above!
Re:Sex (Score:2)
no, it's exercise
My first attempt at this one... (Score:2)
ok, that sucked. This would have been more kickass if the news was tha gamers were aliens, robots, or at least some sort of mildly aaggressive animal. Human... just no punch to it
The unfortunate part (Score:2)
Origins of the Myth (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the great engine behind the "popular" image of gamers as loafers stems from marketing rather than popular experience. I see "gamers" depicted in television advertising regularly. It always has 2-3 guys in their early 20's sitting in a dark room, on the couch, surrounded by junk food and illuminated by the blue glow of a television. I see this almost every time I turn on "The Simpsons."
By contrast, in real life I've only seen this environment a handful of times. Now why exactly the marketing folks think telling me I can be like the balding guy on the couch is going to get me to buy their game, I don't know. Maybe the answer is that gamer/loafers tend to wind up in marketing?
This just in: Video Games are Popular! (Score:2)
wow.
+1 Interesting.
As oppsed to chatters (Score:2)
As opposed to chatters, I assume. My roommate discovered ICQ and hasn't been seen in public for about 9 months now. He eats while standing in the kitchen because presumably going to the dining room to sit down would take too much time from in front of his computer. After coming home from work, it's straight to the computer and when getting up he's usually a hurry to get to
don't believe it (Score:2)
Gamers are everywhere (Score:2)
NOOO! I'm surrounded by them! Help!
Gamers are better off... (Score:2)
IMHO, it would be great if more people remembered that:
Drug addicts are humans.
Gays are humans.
Alcoholics are humans.
Smokers are human.
Disabled/handicapped people are humans.
People that don't agree with you are humans.
People with different religions beliefs are humans.
People of other races are humans.
These are people who need t
Re:Gamers are better off... (Score:2)
Maybe I am just old (Score:5, Interesting)
What is it about mainstream culture that has made entertainment something you watch rather than participate in. Isn't it more likely that sports fans are the ones that are not execising, going to church and voting. "Can't right now babe, the game is on." OK that is probably a personal bias since I don't watch sports. Still I do not get this attitude that gaming is somehow bad for you. Where did it come from?
Re:Maybe I am just old (Score:2)
There's the "When I was your age, I didn't need that" deal, which is more a resistence to change or just a misunderstanding of how/why changes are happening.
It's a more valid complaint, which TV also gets, that video games are both less physical and less social than many other forms of entertainment, and this can lead to people sort of losing touch with reality. S
Killjoy (Score:3, Insightful)
If Pat Robertson had published a study saying that 83% of all gamers are pedophiles, we would have screamed that the study was obviously biased. Well, if we're going to convert over people who are actually against games, we're going to need studies that aren't going to appear totally biased to the Censor-Happy crowd.
Slashdotters...normal? (Score:2)
I give people I meet in real life that show a bit of computer/coding proficiency a test shortly after meeting them. (New co-workers, etc)
The test is simple, "Do you read Slashdot?"
How creepy is that?
Anyways, going to social events and playing musical instruments cuts into my coding time.
Tha
People are Stupid (Score:2)
Re:People are Stupid (Score:2)
It's odd, I could say I have nothing against coffee, but then I'd be lying. Most likely the person who told you 'I have nothing against...' really meant he/she doesn't find the activity offensive, but merely boring.
She's probably scared she would have to try a game, and isn't prepared to be that tolerant.
Re:People are Stupid (Score:2)
Whenever I hear someone saying something like that, to me it sounds like they dislike said activity, but they don't care if other people do it, while at the same time believing that there is a set of people who do believe that said activity do care about that activity because it is the "new evil" or something. I figure it will just take some time, hopefully we'll get
An Unbiased source? (Score:2)
Dairy Association says Butter good for you... Philip Morris says Cigs are good... etc, etc....
JEEEEZ!
Gamers can't be slacking loafers these days (Score:2, Interesting)
Up to date video cards, system boards, disk space, games, subscription MMORGs, broadband...
Sheese, maybe I'll go back to 2nd Edition AD&D...
---
Yea, yea, I'm sure I'll come up with a snappy sig soon
Of course the gamers all responded truthfully (Score:2)
Human (Score:2)
My answer to that question is that FPS/RTS gamers in particular probably are for the most part from what I've seen...although the hard-core FPS crowd *seems* a little more anarchic/aggressive than most...which then again isn't surprising given most FPS subject matter.
With regards to MUDs in particular however...I have strong suspicions that Eugene
Devil's advocate (Score:2)
In related news, Microsoft claims Windows less expensive than Linux, the NRA claims that guns don't kill people, people kill people (and so do monkeys, if you give them a gun! - thanks eddie!), tobacco companies claim that smoking is not that bad for you, and SCO claims that they own linux.
Although I obviously agree that gamers are normal people (duh!), shouldn't we question the sou
Nice choice of adjectives (Score:2)
I am a Unique Snowflake. (Score:2)
Soylent gamers... (Score:2)
Re:What the Fuck??? (Score:4, Interesting)
This story seems to be about how people perceive video games and the people who play them. Since a huge slice of Slashdotters likely are also gamers, this probably is of interest to more people than you might think.
One of the reasons I like Slashdot is that it goes beyond the same tech stories I could find at any number of other sites. Slashdot is an online magazine of geek culture, and that culture includes plenty of things beyond new *NIX applications.
Re:What the Fuck??? (Score:4, Insightful)
As a gainfully employed 35-year-old techie (not so much a gamer, but that's largely due to lack of time) who exercises and bathes regularly, owns his own home, and has a sex life, I get really goddamn tired of all the geek stereotyping (fat smelly unepmployed virgins living in their parents' basements, etc.) It's especially annoying here on
Re:What the Fuck??? (Score:2)
That *is* the average geek, by definition. Geeks *aren't* normal, otherwise they'd never fit the criteria for geekhood. The fact that you have a sex life with something other than your hand is proof positive that you aren't a geek.
Max
Re:What the Fuck??? (Score:2)
So with that out of the way
Re:Now what do I do? (Score:2)