You typed up that wall in a fit of passion so I might not be connecting with you properly here. I did read it though, and I think I sort of understand what you're pissed about.
I think that gamer group you hang out with is just too self-conscious. They were probably made fun of in the past and found that isolating themselves while alienating others made them feel better (about themselves).
Some people go up to others and actually talk to them for legitimate reasons. Of course you know this because you don't copy your gamer friends' behavior.
I was actually just like you in high school--a hardcore "gamer" (several hours a day) and a member of a sports team too. My gamer friends were just about as friendly and open to others as my teammates were. High school is hardly the place to form a judgment about this though. Mostly everyone there is in a bubble. If you want to see how people really behave, you have to wait until university or when you start working. People behave differently when they understand that everything they say and has more than just a inconsequential, local effect.
I think that gamer group you hang out with is just too self-conscious. They were probably made fun of in the past and found that isolating themselves while alienating others made them feel better (about themselves).
Some people go up to others and actually talk to them for legitimate reasons. Of course you know this because you don't copy your gamer friends' behavior.
I was actually just like you in high school--a hardcore "gamer" (several hours a day) and a member of a sports team too. My gamer friends were just about as friendly and open to others as my teammates were. High school is hardly the place to form a judgment about this though. Mostly everyone there is in a bubble. If you want to see how people really behave, you have to wait until university or when you start working. People behave differently when they understand that everything they say and has more than just a inconsequential, local effect.