PAX 2010: Warren Spector Keynote

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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PAX 2010: Warren Spector Keynote

The creator of Deus Ex thinks that the survival of games as an art form could depend on hardcore gamers embracing the people who play FarmVille.

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zombie711

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I embrace people playing casual games even casual games I hate, but farmvile? thats a bridge too far.
 

BobisOnlyBob

is Only Bob
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There's nothing wrong with casual gaming, mainstream gaming, hardcore gaming, extreme single-gaming, board gaming, card gaming, online gaming, massively multiplayer gaming, roleplay gaming, console gaming, PC gaming, arcade gaming.... *a moment of breath*


...if you play, you're doing it right. Hating another's game is a mistake. Games are individual things, collections of things, and a whole singular thing. Gaming is both art and crap.

Get this through your heads! Gaming exists and on the whole it's pretty good! Does it matter who is playing, what it being played, where and how? As long as the games you enjoy exist and continue to exist, and with some luck continue to be made, then stop complaining that some games get more or less attention! It doesn't matter!

/rant over

I'm with Spector on this one. We don't need solidarity or flawless unity, but cutting down the insecurity, insularity and bitterness would be nice.
 
Apr 28, 2008
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I'm with Spector.

These "casuals" aren't the enemy. And who knows, maybe if we weren't such asses to them, they'd get into some of the deeper stuff.
 

Adzma

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My only problem with casual gaming is when it bleeds on to established hardcore titles. Sure a company wants to broaden their audience, but don't ignore your long term fans in the process.
 

oranger

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The reason we the gamers flip out over casual gaming is because there isn't an infinite amount of money to make video games.
Casual gaming dilutes the pool, so to speak. And we don't generally like casual games like we do -regular- games.
 

murphy7801

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I hate to say this but the world is full of idiots and are culture merely plays to dumbing down now they want to muscle in and dumb down a bastion of art and culture warren spector you have sold out to my mind to be saying this.
 

Waif

MM - It tastes like Candy Corn.
Mar 20, 2010
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Warren Spector is right in saying that we all need to join forces in order to fight the evil that assails us. Casual gamers have numbers, but are generally laid back. Hardcore gamers have the passion, but not the numbers needed to really influence politics. Casual games, and casual gamers have always been looked down upon by hardcore gamers, no matter what influence they may have, they are not the real problem that needs to be addressed. We have to consider that a world of stupidity now threatens games, and game developers. We have to understand that the real enemy is not in casual games, it is in the ignorance and blind bigotry of some very stupid people. Casual gamers are likely going to be the least affected by any outcome, but they might be able to be the driving force that can turn the tide.
 

sosolidshoe

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I think the Venerable Mr Spector is missing the point a little. Certainly, there are a small number of vocal arseholes who will complain about casual gaming simply because their hobby is no longer "underground" enough for them, but for the majority of gamers who're uneasy over the casual influx, it's not about that.

The problem, as many see it, is that publishers aren't making the types of games they want to play very much any more. We know how monolithic businesses work, corporations are too prevalent in the modern world for it to be otherwise, and we know that businesses don't care about customers, they care about money. Customers are a means to an end. If they can make more money by churning out casual games for the Wii, Move or Kinect, then they will.

That's what the unease among "traditional"(I hate the term "hardcore") gamers is about - We feel we're being slowly abandoned.
 

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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Dexter111 said:
Honestly I don't care about the "casuals", as long as they stay away from me as when they were lepers they can live in peace xD

What I do have something against is "gaming" turning into another "mainstream industry" (which it ultimately is unfortunately) that turns the quality of respective products and their depth into basically watered down shit in order to make games "that sell really well". It happened with movies, it happened with music and it is happening with games since the "X360" and "PS3" became so popular and mainstream.

Take Warren Spector for example...
He did the Wing Commander Series
He did the Ultima Series
System Shock
Thief Series
Deus Ex Series
...and now he has "Epic Mickey" xD

I couldn't care less if those existed separate from awesome deep, challenging and intelligent games, but what they did is largely REPLACING them.
You know, for all we disagree I can usually respect the points you make and see where you're coming from. This time, I just disagree. I don't think that the presence of mainstream gaming/music/movies replaces the other things. They'll still exist, but there will be things in addition to games targeted at the core.

I think it's a bit unfair of you to assume that the man who made Thief and Deus Ex is selling out just because of the subject matter. It's like he directly said: Gamers need to be able to let a man who made a game about a cyborg in a trenchcoat and sunglasses make a game about a little cartoon mouse. If he does Epic Mickey and successfully incorporates "hardcore" gameplay elements into a game that is equally accessible to casual players, what is wrong with that?
 

daftnoize

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In a strange way I would class my "LADDY" friends who play fifa or COD as casual gamers whereas someone who spends HOURS on puzzle quest essentually a casual game with a dressing gown on as hardcore gamers. I don't think any particular games are casual or hardcore as such its your attitude towards them. I don't know anyone my age who has never played mario for example and most own the plumber in some form or another, people who play it at a friends house occasionally are causal. People who get 240 odd stars in galaxy 2 are hardcore. You find as well that alot of games nowadays are a mix between casual and hardcore. Someting like soul calibur or mario kart say...

Its a growing industry, I think its an amazing art form others don't. I love Duchamp, Rothko, Dali and Picaso. Idiots don't!
 

bimbley

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murphy7801 said:
I hate to say this but the world is full of idiots and are culture merely plays to dumbing down now they want to muscle in and dumb down a bastion of art and culture warren spector you have sold out to my mind to be saying this.
You might want to consider learning how to spell 'our', reading up on some basic grammar, and rereading your posts to see whether they make any sense before accusing the rest of the world of being 'idiots'.

-Bim
 

murphy7801

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bimbley said:
murphy7801 said:
I hate to say this but the world is full of idiots and are culture merely plays to dumbing down now they want to muscle in and dumb down a bastion of art and culture warren spector you have sold out to my mind to be saying this.
You might want to consider learning how to spell 'our', reading up on some basic grammar, and rereading your posts to see whether they make any sense before accusing the rest of the world of being 'idiots'.

-Bim
Im dsylexic
 

lumenadducere

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This was a fantastic keynote. I've thought for a while now that Warren Spector is a mad crazy genius, and this speech showed him to be extremely charismatic and thoughtful as well. I'm very glad that he was the speaker this year (my first PAX!) and I very much hope that they put it on Ustream or something like they did last year's. More people should hear this speech.
 

KEM10

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Adzma said:
My only problem with casual gaming is when it bleeds on to established hardcore titles. Sure a company wants to broaden their audience, but don't ignore your long term fans in the process.
oranger said:
The reason we the gamers flip out over casual gaming is because there isn't an infinite amount of money to make video games.
Casual gaming dilutes the pool, so to speak. And we don't generally like casual games like we do -regular- games.
You guys are right. After the most casual system came out (the Wii) Nintendo never attempted to produce any of their huge landmark games like Mario, Zelda, Metroid, the Cart series, or even Super Smash Brothers.

You know, if these developers tackle the casual market, there is a lot more money for a lot less work in there. I think PopCap is the highest earning game company with only a handful of employees. The extra revenue from the casual games are used to fund the IPs. They keep making them for two reasons, they sell huge and the producers like them too. I doubt they will just throw it away because there are a ton of kids playing resort or a few moms on Wii fit. Hell, it is easier to convince the Mrs. to have a game system in the house if there is family interaction and it can do more than just rot your brain.
 

Soylent Dave

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Nerds have always been too frightened of change for their own good.

It's because (many of) the sort of people who get into nerdy hobbies (like computer gaming, or roleplaying, or art-house films, etc. etc.) are interested in these things because they're niche.

Nerds like being expert at things, and being king of a niche hobby is especially satisfying - because mainstream people don't even have the slightest idea what you're talking about, much less any chance at expert knowledge or skill. We like to feel superior to ordinary people, and dammit the fact that I know more about Star Wars than the average man on the street means that I am superior.

So if your nerdy niche hobby is in danger of becoming - gasp - mainstream, it's terrifying. Terrifying, because the obscure knowledge you spent years (possibly) learning and becoming expert in is suddenly not so esoteric any more. Now anyone can learn how to play the games you've been practising with all your life.

Worse - your hobby is being made simpler, so that suddenly you don't need to learn arcane passwords and dying arts in order to enjoy it - now anyone can get involved. It's easy.

The skills you've been honing over the past decades don't matter any more, because now videogame controllers don't have 102 awkwardly placed buttons and switches - and now they actually fit in a human hand comfortably (with buttons right where your fingers naturally rest).

Some controllers even respond to instinctive movements of the human hand and body - something that anyone can use immediately, rendering all your experience with controllers wasted.

It's not fair.

Given all that, it's not really a surprise that nerds are horrified and resentful when their hobbies become open to the mainstream. But it is short-sighted.

We can pretend that joining the mainstream is 'dumbing down' or some such, but more consumers mean more money and more investment, and that means our hobby continues to grow.

Larger markets don't destroy art and innovation - they make it more possible. More gamers means more people interested in making games, more companies interested in producing games and more money floating around to make and purchase those games.

It probably means that a lot of shit will get made - but that's no different to the last twenty years.

It also means that the good games get better.
 

Smokescreen

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Dec 6, 2007
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I'm pretty much down with Soylent Dave here.

Having seen many other things I love throughout my life become mainstream (dinosaurs, Transformers, heavy metal, comic books) I have to admit; most of it was shit. But some real genius came out of what was left over.

It does me no harm to have the masses love 'popular' heavy metal when I'm getting bands that are often lesser known but doing something that speaks to me.

/but no one should forgive the Transformers movies. Ever.