This is a narrow ass view of what gamer culture is and I'm unsure I like the negative connotations you paint people you define as 'gamers' with. Even on the extreme end where a significant fraction of one's social life revolves around meeting up with friends for the express purpose of playing a game, or games, this doesn't mean that one is a neck beard, dude bro, or socially regressive. Yet this seems to be how you and others use the term 'gamer' in this thread.Alyrium Denryle wrote:Well, there are people who play games to pass the time or because they are enjoyable. Then there are people for whom various forms of gaming form the focus of their social lives which are structured around their interactions with a relatively narrow group of people who are similarly situated. Their individual identity largely revolves around this.
It is the difference between someone who goes outside for a game of flag football every now and again, and Athletes.
Now, I am not sure that gamer culture is dead, but it has certainly evolved, with various sorts of gaming now catering to a much large set of demographic and personality characteristics and the group of people who identify as gamers has expanded beyond the meatspace isolated adolescent males it once did.
Some of them view this expansion as threatening to their own individual identities in a way similar to how right-wing reactionaries in some westernethnic nation states react to foreign immigrants.
I identify as a gamer and do so because I enjoy video games, board games, PnP RPGs, and sports. Every one of these things are forms of games and all shape who I am and what I enjoy doing in my spare time. Does enjoying these things and using them as a means to keep in contact with friends I've had for over a decade make me a gamer or does it make me a 'gamer'? Was I a 'gamer' back in the early and mid 2000's before gaming exploded or was I just a youth who enjoyed games because I grew up with them and used them as a way to bond with friends? Does liking and playing Squeenix RPG's in middle school and roleplaying via the old Avidgamers boards in the early 2000's make the female friends I've known since middle school bigoted neck beards too, or do you just have a narrow and negative view of gaming culture as a self admitted outsider?