Overly Defensive Gamers Are Hurting the Industry's Credibility

Alexemmy
Friday, November 26, 2010

"hey yoshis my favorite charaacter so? shut ur face" -SUPERSONICFLIPPY

 

Movie buffs and music snobs don't need to convince you to like something. In fact, they're probably more likely to scoff if you don't and walk away of the mind that you'll never really get it. So what makes us video-game enthusiasts feel the need to defend the honor of things we enjoy, and is it poisoning the hobby's credibility?

 

Everyone from the media, politicians, and our parents, to the experts on other forms of entertainment that don't consider our industry of choice "art worthy," have beaten down the avid gamer over the years. We've had to fight for what we love our entire lives. Maybe we've just become a jumpy bunch, ready to brawl at a moment's notice, but there is a good chance it is hurting our eventual acceptance by the mainstream.

 

A while back I did a mock video review of Super Mario Galaxy 2 for a video-game satire blog that I started. It was purposely over-the-top, full of outlandish claims, and made as little sense as possible. I ended it with a score of zero out of 10 and then admitted that I hadn't even played the game. The concept just upset me so much that it deserved that low of a score. Now sure, this approach was never going to attract any well-thought-out responses, but the amount of replies I got to this verbal diarrhea with absolutely no grounds for an argument was kind of surprising.

 

 

"f*g well for one yoshi is way different from dino dino has never? ate things whole and your f**king retarded i mean really your b*tching about 1 f**king thing you fat f**k go to hell for your sins" -nintendogamerlper

 

I mean really. I called Mario a rip-off of The Flintstones, said that the plot made no sense, and justified my zero score by claiming that Yoshi was an abomination as I admitted I hadn't even played the game. Even if the YouTube commenters really loved Mario Galaxy 2, my opinion clearly isn't very important.

I half expected anyone who didn't get the joke to just laugh about how uninformed I was and move on, but obviously they felt the urge to fight for the honor of a game they loved.

 

I've always been of the impression that it was only a matter of time until video games became as accepted as movies or music are in our society. Still, there is something to be said for being inclusive to newcomers. I bought my first comic book only a few years ago, and I was kind of nervous to step into my local comic shop with no knowledge about where the one I wanted was located or if it was an acceptably cool thing to buy. 

 

The perception that comic fans are harsh on those without sufficient knowledge of the medium certainly exists, probably created by The Comic Book Guy from The Simpsons. So it was a mental block I had to overcome (turns out the local "Comic Book Guy" was extremely nice and recommended stuff I should catch-up on). Chances are, a lot of people out there are nervous about stepping into that GameStop and asking about whatever it is they happen to want because they've seen the flood of nasty comments on a game review or editorial that didn't say exactly the right thing.

 

I'd rather put our best foot forward as a community. The last thing we want is to potentially turn off new recruits. When we use our passion in a creative way, making works of art that show our dedication to the hobby we love, it paints the community in a positive light. Let's have more of that and less attacks on people's opinions of games you enjoyed. While I put that video out there as a joke and found the responses hilarious, it is still a problem for people that put out honest opinions and are met with nothing more than vitriol.

 
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Comments (9)
Me
November 26, 2010

Interesting article.  I've always found it very difficult to strike the right tone with a comment... but I try to do the best I can with it.  

I'm always a little taken aback by the more hateful comments I see out there.  As far as my own articles are concerned, however, I'm usually happy to get any kind of comment, negative or otherwise!

Default_picture
November 26, 2010

I certainly know that every time I play on XBL or see some infamous viral video from XBL it makes me glad i'm a PC gamer. Granted, the PC has it's share of inhibited people but i always notice a difference.

If that is enough to push me away, I can only imagine other less initiated people would find it equally as uninviting when faced with a 12 year old British kid yelling at them about what ever comes to mind. 

Forums or chat rooms related to gaming are no different. Gaming's worst floats to the top unfortunately.

Picture_002
November 26, 2010

Honestly, I think this is a lot more of an issue in the online space. You know, where it's relatively consequence-free to act as mindless and disrespect as humanly possible over things that aren't that important in the first place. Even with defensive gamers I've met in person, most of them I've come across have at least made more effort be respectful and thoughtful than many a sports debate or political conversation I've come across. So I question if this is an actual real problem of interaction outside the online space of large concern. 

That said, I just think some people get a little too emotional about it. As a long-time sports fan (and once again writer), I'd watch many an emotional attachement to a team make incredibly intelligent individuals spout off the most illogical, non-factual statements that make some angry gamer rants almost sound respectable.

Almost.

Honestly, that where I think a lot of comes. I think a lot of the gamers Alex writes about are often coming from places of being overly attached to certain things of not the medium in itself. Which is fine on a certain level, fans are emotional. Some have the attachment, as some fans are prone to, where they don't actually want inclusiveness. They want what "theirs," which never actually ever is, to remains theirs. Even if it fosters the same misunderstanding that leads to perceptions they complain about. Some are attached are identify possibly too much with particular characters, games if not the medium as a whole to the point they see something satirical like Alex did or legitimate criticism or concerns as personal attacks onto themselves.

I think it would serve the gamer community as a whole, not just with credibility with outsiders, for some of us to take a little of that emotion out of it. Not that I want people to take the passion away from it.  But if credibility is a goal, some of the emotionally immature backlash or encouragement to dismiss almost any outside criticism couldn't hurt.

Default_picture
November 27, 2010

Where can I find this mock video review??? =)

Alexemmy
November 27, 2010

@Jimmy - http://gamesinquisitor.blogspot.com/2010/06/super-mario-galaxy-2-video-review.html

Be sure to leave me an extremely angry comment.

Profile_pic4
November 27, 2010

Oh wow.  There was so much awesome contained in that short "review"... I can hardly stand it.

Orange and red are TOTALLY the same thing.

Also, I know there are safety issues involving what I am about to say, but Alex you have GOT to do a weekly/monthly review while driving around.  It lends INSTANT credibility.  Then again, perhaps you already do.. in which case I need to pay more attention.

37893_1338936035999_1309080061_30825631_6290042_n
November 27, 2010

Another possibility is age. You don't see a whole lot of 12-year-olds going onto Pitchfork or Rotten Tomatoes and putting up the type of comments that you saw (though I'm sure there still are. Unfortunately, nowhere on the Internet is safe from a caps locked ankle biter.)

The best games (despite the ratings by the ESRB,) get played by everyone. The best movies and music aren't.

Could be a factor.

Alexemmy
November 27, 2010

@Keith - That might be a good way for me to easily make more content for Game Inquisitor while being busy with all the stuff on Bitmob and my other site. And it's not that dangerous because I do about a billion more dangerous things while driving every single day. You know the best part about that red and orange comment? There are a couple comments on the youtube that argue against that point. Well, duh!

@Chase - Very true, though I think the more obscure indie/art type games are probably our best equivalent to indie music and movies, we just have the same sites talking about both things. In the music world the average listener whose never heard of any indie bands won't stumble upon an article about the hot new indie bands. In video games though, if they read a game site they will see all the articles about the most hyped new indie game. I forget where I was going with this, but that's probably also a factor to...something.

N27502567_30338975_4931
November 28, 2010

How do you know the angry comments aren't from people who got the joke and are playing along by posting over the top, absurdist fanboy vitriol?

I have run in to the same kind of thing. For about a year now I've been writing the occasional "blind review" for my own satirical videogame blog, usually just on highly anticipated releases. I'm usually careful not to be critical in most of them, instead just making up ludicrous play mechanics to praise based on the game's name (for example, I claimed Dragon Age was an RPG about trying to learn how old all the dragons in the kingdom were), in the hopes that it would be clear this was all made up. My Medal of Honor review crossed into a more vague area when I claimed it was a terrorism simulator and filled the review with mock-jingoism, playing with the controversy that already surrounded the game. I ended up getting a couple funny, surprisingly earnest defenses of the game in the comments section, one person who even realized their mistake and wrote a follow-up.

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