Casual gamers are people who think games are supposed to be played for fun. Hardcore gamers are people who understand that games are serious business.
Here is my definition . . . although I vastly prefer the term "enthusiast" to "hardcore." I consider my wife to be a casual gamer, despite her 350+ hours in Skyrim for the following reason: she can go 6 months without picking up any game at all. I have difficulty going 6 hours without booting up something. Perhaps "addict" vs "well adjusted" might be better termskeniakittykat said:I love all kinds of games. From flash dress-up games to bioshock to obscure retro titles and everything in between.
One of my favorite developers is 'Nitrome' and they make fun, colorful browser based flash games.
But does playing these make me less of a gamer? I've been playing since I was a little girl, Doom and wolvenstein were some of the first games I ever played and have at least 7 consoles with a decently sized libraries for them lying around, so by most standards I'm a 'hardcore gamer'.
While I enjoy playing wii games and pick-up and play games as well, so I'm actually casual?
I my opinion a gamer is someone who plays games as a real hobby. No matter the game or platform. So why do we keep on labeling people? Is it just snobbish, or is there truly a difference that causes a problem?
And why is the casual market being looked down upon to the point that the word 'casual' is used almost as an insult? Is it a good thing that people who never would have played otherwise get introduced to our #1 favorite pass-time? Or is it hurting and crippling the market by causing games to be easier and more accessible.
What's your opinion?
That's kind of the opposite of the thinking that leads the aversion for the A-word (Accessibility). To make the games you like be played by more people as you want it to, there is (or the marketing departments of publishers believe there is) a need for streamlining (dumbing down, casualizing) the games and make them more "cinematic". By the time more people is playing the games you like, they aren't games you like anymore.ohnoitsabear said:Really, gaming being more accessible is by no means a bad thing. More people enjoying games can only be good. I do kind of wish that there were a few more games that bridged the gap between "casual" and "core" games, but that comes more from a selfish desire to have more people playing the games I like so that more of them will be made than any issue with casual games themselves.
I was going so say basically the same, that only e-sports are hardcore. But you don't need to be professional to be involved in e-sports, there are many amateur players, teams and leagues and I would never discard them as hardcore gamers.TheKasp said:Or technically: You are a casual unless you are a professional gamer.