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Aritcle
An interesting article on gaming and gaming cultural stereotypes can be found here
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In a recent interview with renowned anti-videogame lawyer Jack Thompson, he said to me “There is no such thing as gamer culture; there are just people who play games.” Now, as a gamer myself, and a studier of psychology and sociology, I would disagree and I am sure many other people would do the same. He does however make a good point. Gamer culture is very different from other cultures and subculture out there. It dosen’t really have a public face, or voice, or even a prevalent stereotype that we can be angry about beyond the standard view of “geek.” In fact, in all outward appearances, gamer culture really does look like a random collection of people playing games to waste away the unproductive hours of the day. On the contrary, however, we all know it’s much more than that. Go to any tournament and you see gamer cliques trading strategies, talking about frames per second, or damage rates, or any thing prevalent to the game being played. You see people ranging in appearance from the lost novice not even sure where to sign up, to the hardcore fans with the label shirts and the expensive gear, to the co-players, and finally the crazy people who do strange stuff like, wear a bathrobe belt like a headband and bring computer printouts to help with between game strategy adjustments (I assure you I am not one of those people *insincere shifty eyes*). But who ARE these people? What is the word on the street? How does the industry view them and what impact do they have on game development and marketing? More importantly, how do others view these people? Well, these questions are some of the most complicated to answer, and without years of research we will never get one that is completely concrete, but through asking a few professors, researchers, industry representatives, gamers, and of course random people on the street, you can get a feeling of an answer that is at least a little. So let’s break this down to the microcosms and units of gamer culture and examine them closely under the microscope... |
he should expand his critisism/racist comments:
musical culture
gaming culture
chat/computer culture
xtreme sports culture
and the list can grow on
People just playing games - we all share something in common
lawyers working for a firm/cliet - they all share something in common
snowboarders - they share something in common
get my point?
each of the above groups, sharing common things and experiences.
each group has develop/adopt his linguistic skills, social skills, dress code to the standards of the group
any outsider to the group, hearing a conversation between the group members, will have problems communicating with them
all of the above groups, are just the evolution of the medieval guilds/clans (where people with same skills or interests form the guilds in order to promote/advance their knowledges/skills/theories)
but i guess they dont teach gaming socialogy or pshychotherapy in most universities/colleges - so almost all "experts" tend to critisize these new groups/cultures/teams in an efford to hide their lack of understanding
what we dont understand, we destroy - pathetic
Tags: mmo games stereotypes
Ariticle url: http://my.mmosite.com/blog/4fc66370fd045cc3ae4752d77e62f4de/blog/item/85506292ac494ffc247f39e618d38cd6.html
