Accepting Nerds/Geeks/Dorks that do not look Stereotypical

JaceArveduin

New member
Mar 14, 2011
1,952
0
0
I'm a shorter guy that seems to be avoided for some reason, weight's bout average, and I'm pale and I don't look like I've been lifting weights (which is true*)

I asked one of the girls (small school and I've known them for ages, so they don't seem worried about me) and she said I was intimidating. dunno how, but I guess it's true. I went to one of the college days a year ago, and not a single college representitive walked up to me and tried me to go to that college, and I was there for a couple of hours. Oh well, I've got a group of guys I hang out with and that's enough.

rhizhim said:
[
ahem:

never trust a beautiful woman; especially one who's interested in you.
Sounds bout right, maybe I'm just paranoid *shrug*
 

darksuccubus

New member
Jan 11, 2011
110
0
0
I'm a geek-girl (which in itself is strange if you listen to stereotypes). I'm a bit chubby, yes, but I've been told that I'm quite attractive. I'm a gigantic fan of Vampire the masquerade and still have lots of books to read. I do have stereotypical looking geek-friends, glasses, not extremely attractive, etc but they were never that suspicious, because we met each other in uni's anime society. Probably the reason that nobody is surprised is because I'm in uni, where there are lots of different people, so non-geek looking geeks are quite common. Our VtM GM is really attractive :D
 

Chemical Alia

New member
Feb 1, 2011
1,658
0
0
I don't look at all like a nerd by my appearance, much less a game dev. I'm pretty fashionable and also about to turn 30, so a lot of younger kids say I remind them of their teachers these days D:

I get comments in the elevator at work from people who work on other floors like "Hey, you're not one of those programmer people who makes games up on 12, are you?" and "Oh, how nice that you're going up to visit your boyfriend at work!"

I tend to like being inconspicuous, it comes in handy sometimes. As for my friends, they're all pretty nerdy and no one has ever not accepted me. In fact, I have plenty of nerdy/gamer friends who wouldn't appear to be so by how they present themselves.
 

live2laugh

New member
Dec 10, 2009
45
0
0
People tend not to assume I'm a geek from my apperence but that may be because I'm a girl and only sometimes wear geeky apparel. Though when people find out I'm a geek, they do tend to accept me quite quickly.
 

ChaoticKraus

New member
Jul 26, 2010
598
0
0
ObsidianJones said:
I'm a 6'2 black guy
Kinda on-topic: Do you also feel that nerds/geeks tend to act very weird around black people? My best friend is black and whenever we go to an anime/games convention people look at him like he's some kind alien. It's like they can't possibly fanthom that a black guy could be a nerd and just see him as threatening. Which is kinda funny considering he's 5'5, skinnier than a skeleton and kinda shy.

OT: Yes, i have felt this many many times. I don't really go out of my way to socialize with nerds/geeks specifically, but when i'm at conventions and such i feel that people are suspicious of me. It usually goes away after some talk since i tend to notice and put on my extra-friendly approach but it still concerns me for whatever reason.

I do look like the token white guy in all rap videos, so i guess it kind of makes sense that they would avoid me. But i feel that we as a sub-culture (or whatever) needs to open up and not be so damn excluding. The arrogance and entitlement prevalent in this parts of the nerd sphere needs to go.

Catchpa: two buck chuck. Now all i can imagine is some creepy redneck stalking me with his buckshot ready and loaded. "shivers"
 

Kolby Jack

Come at me scrublord, I'm ripped
Apr 29, 2011
2,519
0
0
This sounds like a topic straight out of high school. Most people are accepting of others as long as those people aren't assholes; it doesn't matter what they look like. Of course, High School is a world all its own, so normal societal rules pretty much just fly out the window.
 

Iron Criterion

New member
Feb 4, 2009
1,271
0
0
EeveeElectro said:
I've seen some gorgeous geeks. A few of the people on here are very sexy too and I wouldn't think they were into geeky stuff by looking at them.
Thank you for noticing sir. *Tips hat*

OT: I look more like the typical metaller than I do a nerd; but I could never be mistaken for a model or a jock so I guess this type of thing rarely happens to me.
 
Sep 24, 2008
2,461
0
0
ChaoticKraus said:
ObsidianJones said:
I'm a 6'2 black guy
Kinda on-topic: Do you also feel that nerds/geeks tend to act very weird around black people? My best friend is black and whenever we go to an anime/games convention people look at him like he's some kind alien. It's like they can't possibly fanthom that a black guy could be a nerd and just see him as threatening. Which is kinda funny considering he's 5'5, skinnier than a skeleton and kinda shy.
I kind of do. I went to a con last year in New York, and a few of the vendors were trying to talk to me about minorities in comic books. If I asked, that might have had some relevance. I believe a lot of our culture tends to focus on one image of people to relate to, and we have trouble thinking that others have shared in our experiences because we simply don't seem them in our shared experiences.

Jack the Potato said:
This sounds like a topic straight out of high school. Most people are accepting of others as long as those people aren't assholes; it doesn't matter what they look like. Of course, High School is a world all its own, so normal societal rules pretty much just fly out the window.
Is High school ever over? I don't know how many jobs you personally worked in (that is no means an attack on you in any form, I just don't know you from Adam), but the only thing that separates office 'politics' and high school politics are mortgages and taxes. People are catty and juvenile everywhere.
 

MetalMagpie

New member
Jun 13, 2011
1,523
0
0
I'm no longer sure I even know what counts as a "nerd"! I have friends who are work in science/engineering, but don't have any traditionally "nerdy" hobbies. I have friends who are really into video games, but have never seen Star Wars or The Matrix. And I have friends who role-play, but know very little about science and technology.

I know very few "all-rounder nerds", so I don't really know what one is supposed to look like. When I was at school, the shy, spotty, glasses-wearing kids were all art students!

If you're asking about stereotypical gamers, I'd like to point out that the video games industry is now the most profitable entertainment industry in the UK. It's worth more than film (cinema and DVDs combined)! So we're hardly a minority any more.
 
Aug 19, 2010
611
0
0
the thing is that i really don't look part to my gamer-self, besides that the clothes i wear are video-game based, though it would be hard to tell for those who aint gamers,thus, when revealing my true nature, massive waves of surprise and disbelief follow
 

DugMachine

New member
Apr 5, 2010
2,566
0
0
I can totally relate. When I was in highschool, my friends were the "nerds," but the nerds who were in advanced classes and were still pretty normal people aside from being academically smart or whatever.

Then there were the "anime kids" as I called them. Bunch of kids who would sit near the stage in the lunch room and sit around eating pocky, reading anime, playing magic, ranting about jocks (super stereotypical stuff here.)

Then when graduation came around, all my buddies left to fancy colleges and I stayed at the local university here. I asked a friend of mine if there were any clubs where i'd meet people like me and he said the video game club would probably be my best bet. So I go and what do you know? All the "anime kids" were there and more from other high schools and I felt so out of place cause while I am a huge geek and gamer and love A LOT of geek culture I just didn't seem to fit in with those kids.

I don't know, it's been 3 years now and i've hung out with them a few times but I just can't really mix with those people and they seem to treat me as a stranger cause while we have similar likes, i'm not like them at all. I did meet a girl though and we've been going now for a year so that's nice (gamer girlfriends ftw!)

Not bashing on anime or anybody who are likes it or even people that are similar to them, I just don't mix is all.

I think I read a First World Problem that went, "I'm too nerdy to hang out with regular people but i'm too regular to hang out with nerdy people." Yup, that's pretty much me.
 

Virtual Connor

New member
May 29, 2011
7
0
0
I work in a job where there are very few 'geeks', so for the most part I don't openly admit my geekiness outside my social life. I don't look like a stereotypical nerd/geek, so it makes it easier.

Although it is always fun at work when I realize someone else is undercover too;
"wait, did you just make a reference to final fantasy"
"umm, yeah"
And then we both come out of hiding for a real conversation.

I don't feel the need to make everyone understand 'the real me', or 'the geeky me'. Because I keep my likes and dislikes to myself until I know people better, it makes it easier to fit into different environments. For example, if you're into heavy music and a goth scene you can dress up and go all out with your friends, but you don't need to be permanently dressed in black, with shocking make-up on, shouting out to the world who you are..most people just don't care...
 

Dreiko_v1legacy

New member
Aug 28, 2008
4,696
0
0
DugMachine said:
I can totally relate. When I was in highschool, my friends were the "nerds," but the nerds who were in advanced classes and were still pretty normal people aside from being academically smart or whatever.

Then there were the "anime kids" as I called them. Bunch of kids who would sit near the stage in the lunch room and sit around eating pocky, reading anime, playing magic, ranting about jocks (super stereotypical stuff here.)

Then when graduation came around, all my buddies left to fancy colleges and I stayed at the local university here. I asked a friend of mine if there were any clubs where i'd meet people like me and he said the video game club would probably be my best bet. So I go and what do you know? All the "anime kids" were there and more from other high schools and I felt so out of place cause while I am a huge geek and gamer and love A LOT of geek culture I just didn't seem to fit in with those kids.

I don't know, it's been 3 years now and i've hung out with them a few times but I just can't really mix with those people and they seem to treat me as a stranger cause while we have similar likes, i'm not like them at all. I did meet a girl though and we've been going now for a year so that's nice (gamer girlfriends ftw!)

Not bashing on anime or anybody who are likes it or even people that are similar to them, I just don't mix is all.

I think I read a First World Problem that went, "I'm too nerdy to hang out with regular people but i'm too regular to hang out with nerdy people." Yup, that's pretty much me.


I actually have come across a lot of people like you in my days as the anime-kid (though I look more like a metal fan...meh...I covered that in the post on top :p) and from our perspective, you seem like you're not really enjoying the stuff we love and whatnot and that feels both dismissive and kinda pretentious. I'm not trying to attack you here or anything lol, just trying to explain how they might have felt about you. They'd probably take your lack of over-the-top enthusiasm at the whatever activity took place as a personal insult and treated you based on that.


I remember this one time we were doing samplers at my University's anime club, I brought a bunch of anime two of which were voted to be shown. One of them was .hack/sign and well...too many casual people didn't get it and started making fun of it like you would something aimed at kids, when the show is actually steeped in philosophy and symbolism. Well, I won't lie, I was pretty mad at them. Thankfully, most of them never showed up again so I didn't really have trouble but I don't really know how I'd have treated them after they behaved like that towards something that's kind of a big deal to me.


Well, earlier this year I saw a guy at the club with a .hack tattoo and it brought back memories of that mess so I talked with him about it and we pretty quickly agreed on their lack of intelligence and on other snobby elitist things which aren't very nice at all. I'm sure these are some of the ways you're perceived if you try to be a casual geek at the headquarters of the hardcore. :D
 

Don Savik

New member
Aug 27, 2011
915
0
0
I'm pretty average looking, as there is enough skinny white guys with glasses in the world to populate a planet, but combined with my love of cards/games/media that makes me a textbook nerd.

And unfortunately in my circumstance a social pariah. People just write me off as weird and don't give me the time of day ever :(

Now, when you say "judge by looks" I'm actually doing just more than that. I'm looking at how you act and present yourself, and how you talk about the subject matter. I've had a lot of people claim "oh yea I'm a gamer too!" or "yea I know what this is!" when they don't know shit about anything that comes out of their mouths, and they also have ZERO interest in what you have to say about the topic. It comes off as condescending.

I don't care what you look like, but I can tell in a couple seconds of meeting someone if they truly care about wanting to befriend like-minded people in a hobby they enjoy, or are trying to show off by 'befriending' people they generally don't give 2 shits about.
 

Doclector

New member
Aug 22, 2009
5,010
0
0
Well, if you were a geek, and you looked like a geek, chances are you were bullied in school because of it, and probably by someone who looked like you, op. Not specifically black, of course, but someone who doesn't look like a geek, probably someone fairly athletic. People constantly criticise the tendency to judge a ton of people by a minority, but it's kinda natural. If we touch a cactus, it hurts, and we become afraid to touch something that looks realistically like a cactus, even if we downright know it isn't. Hell, I was bullied by a group of people who were in a band in school, and I became nervous around people who I knew were in bands.

Basically, we geeks are antelope, and you're the antelope that put on a lion costume.

At least, that's my theory. Personally, I'm always a little cautious around someone who could, if they wanted to, kick my ass, but these days I know better than to instantly assume that because someone has the ability to hurt me, they'll do it.
 

somonels

New member
Oct 12, 2010
1,209
0
0
Social impairment is a big part of two of them, so, unless you have it in a noticeable degree, you are not one of the stereotypes. Sounds like you are a normal guy with an interest in unusual things.
If anything, call yourself a geek, meant as an enthusiast in the modern sense.

SOLVEmedia: have an inkling... it be trolling you.
 

Dreiko_v1legacy

New member
Aug 28, 2008
4,696
0
0
If anything people who consciously try to look stereotypical often are making up for some other lacking quality so they figure if at least they look the part people will take em seriously, even if they don't know how to tell persona 3 apart from Star Ocean. (yes, I've had someone confuse Minato from Fayt from SO3...major facepalms were had)
 

KillKill

New member
Sep 6, 2011
97
0
0
TrilbyWill said:
ObsidianJones said:
Captcha: Watch me.

Seriously, people, Captcha is sentient and toying with us! Why do my warnings go unheeded?!
I know! That's what I've been saying for days.
Mine is 'until tomorrow'
...
I'm creeped out.
I don't think you have to worry too much, my last one was dog waffle...
 

GoaThief

Reinventing the Spiel
Feb 2, 2012
1,229
0
0
Dreiko said:
(yes, I've had someone confuse Minato from Fayt from SO3...major facepalms were had)
Weeaboo =/= nerd/gamer, although there is some overlap of course.

I wouldn't be able to tell you the difference, for example. Unfortunately I find a large chunk of games coming out of Japan a little immature for my tastes so don't play them.