So the issue isn't that it's hard to find a "gamer girl", it's that it's hard to find a girl who's as hopelessly obsessive about their hobby. Putting "several hours a day" into any hobby is kind of...pathetic? Unless you're retired or something, maybe. And yeah, people who pour that kind of time into such a hobby would likely have a hard time finding ANY girl, much less one who's into the same thing.BloatedGuppy said:Again, though...many gamers put several hours a DAY into their hobby. If I was putting several hours a day into watching films or sports, I would damn well want a partner who at the very least appreciated it and was willing to indulge me. I have a co-worker who is very outdoorsy. Loves hiking and camping. Goes every weekend. Guess how many women he's willing to date who don't share this interest? The correct answer is zero.everythingbeeps said:But it's not like this with any other hobby. Finding girls into sports? Movies? Reading? No big deal. But "gamer girl" has turned into this mythic creature like Bigfoot. People hear stories that they exist, but nobody's ever seen a real one.
(It also doesn't help that you have so many phonies out there, girls who pretend to be geeks because of all the attention it gets them.)
I game a lot. I've dated women who treated the hobby with suspicion and disdain, and I've dated women who were tolerant of it, and now I'm dating a woman who loves it and likes to talk about it with me and plays the same games I do. Unsurprisingly, I vastly prefer the latter.
Shared interests isn't THE most important thing in a relationship, but it's pretty goddam important.
I also think that refusing to date someone who doesn't share all your interests is stupid, and probably not very smart.
See, I don't think shared interests are necessary, especially if you only indulge those interests for reasonable amounts of time (read: not "several hours a day"). Because I'm not one of those people who thinks a couple needs to spend every fucking waking minute together. I'd hate to be with someone who shared all my interests. How boring would that be? You'd have stuff to talk about, for a while, sure, but neither of you are really helping each other grow or try new things. I like knowing that certain things are "mine", not "ours".