For me, a gamer is someone who's main, or one of their main hobbies is playing video games. Simple as that. I like to imagine other gamers wouldn't classify what games one plays that makes one a gamer, obviously it happens a lot, which sucks.
This analogy doesn't really work though.Strain42 said:To me it's someone who in some way shape or form makes their living through playing video games. While this initially applies to professional gamers, I could understand it being used to describe critics or even testers.
I like to cook, it doesn't make me a chef.
My friend likes to sew, it doesn't make her a tailor.
I play the occasional video game, it doesn't make me a gamer.
It's a hobby for me, I don't let it give me a label. I don't consider myself a Reader, TV-Watcher, or Mini-Golfer, so why would I consider myself a gamer?
I agree. Even games that are typically seen as being the area of casual gamers, if a person tends to play a lot of them and/or devotes a lot of time to them, then I'd consider them a gamer. I guess it's sort of like, do you play games to pass time while waiting for something you'd rather be doing? Or do you deliberately seek out games as something to do even when other options are available? Or... something like that.Hero of Lime said:For me, a gamer is someone who's main, or one of their main hobbies is playing video games. Simple as that. I like to imagine other gamers wouldn't classify what games one plays that makes one a gamer, obviously it happens a lot, which sucks.
Yeah, I don't get it either. It's not like we're getting any respect from being coined gamers, more the opposite shy why do we need to make sure that we are gamers, why do we need to make sure who can't be one?Lilani said:What is with this obsession with categorizing ourselves? You spend a good portion of your post saying you don't have to play specific games or genres to be a gamer, and at one point you even contradict yourself by saying being a gamer comes down to the time and money you put into it, and then in the very next sentence say that if you only play free games that's fine too. What is the value in all this? Do you feel better knowing there are some people who play games that don't fit in your definition of a gamer? Because that's the only value I can see anyone placing in the idea. A way to be exclusive, a way to put yourself on top of others in some fashion. I don't care how apparently "loose" or "inclusive" you think your standards are. If you're putting limits or "You must invest THIS much time in games for me to take you seriously" signs everywhere, then you're doing the exact same thing as the "You must play THIS game for me to take you seriously" people, and it's just as idiotic and unnecessary.Brian Tams said:-snip-
Just to clarify, there's a different between "professional athlete" and an "athlete." Many of the competitors in the Olympics for instance are athletes, but not all of them make a living from sports the way NBA, NFL, MLB, etc. players do. They have hold day jobs and what not when not competing.romxxii said:So what, we call people who play competitively gamers, and then everyone who follows the culture or who doesn't play competitively, we call "games fans"? It's awkward and unnecessary. In fact, this entire need to belong and exclude and divide is unnecessary. Sports is exclusionary by virtue of physical limitations; there will be athletes, and there will be spectators. Gaming, not so much. You don't have to be 250 pounds of muscle to be good at Street Fighter IV. Two of the best SSFIV players, Daigo Umehara, can't be any more different in terms of body type, background, and demeanor. Theoretically, anyone -- including your grandma if the arthritis hasn't set in -- can play and spend enough time on the game to be great.Gatx said:Going off that though, if we want to consider the difference between a professional athlete and an athlete the salary (as in their dedication and investment is more or less equal) then you can't call yourself a gamer until you're so completely dedicated to one particular, competitive multiplayer game to the point of exclusion of almost everything else.
So why the fuck, in this hobby that nearly anyone can pick up, do we act like those jocks in an 80's high school comedy?