Legend11 said:
areseris said:
Avinash_Tyagi said:
MontanaHatchet said: The problem is that there have always been games for all demographics, where's the evidence that the videogame market would have crashed under "the old ways"? |
There may have been games for all demographics(doubtful, but for the sake of argument), but controls were a barrier to entry, most would look at a controller and become intimidated, but with Wii that is not an issue, even elderly folks who never played games are having fun |
Why exactly do you want videogames to go mainstream? That would be a horrible, horrible thing imo. Everything that goes mainstream tends to turn into crap. Why do you want dumbed down games for the masses? If that were to happen, then I would give up consoles and just stick to the PC. It's bad enough that the movie&music industries produces mostly crap (and you have to really search for quality art), now we want to ruin videogames too?
Let developers create the games they actually want to... not the ones that sell to the masses just so the producers can make some coin (EA). Can you imagin how bad videogames would be if we had 30 Michael Bay types for every 1 Martin Scorcese? Let the videogame industry concentrate on pleasing it's core customer and let the industry grow slowly. Why must we be recognized by the masses at all? |
I agree. I don't understand why there are people out there that want videogames to be watered and dumbed down for the masses. Those people who are patting each other on the back and cheerleading this will also be the ones asking what happened to videogames in about 10 years. |
Imagine (for a moment) what would the movie industry be like if the only people who were interested in movies were movie geeks ... Would anyone bother to make some of your favourite movies knowing that (no matter how good they were) they couldn't recover their costs?
Regardless of whether you know it or not, the success of Brittany Spears enables record labels to have 8 to 10 struggling artists touring under a recording contract; many artists (like Maroon 5) would have been dropped from their label after their first album flopped but were allowed to continue because of the money the popstars made.
A mainstream market produces growth in an industry (often uncontrolled 'cancerous' growth) which typically enables the portion of the industry you love to thrive; certainly, a new portion of the industry may be far more successful but it is unlikely that what you like will be lost.