usrevenge said:
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Unless you actually play through those games in current times and still find them better than the current alternatives. Your argument would be valid if people based those feelings on nostalgia alone after years since they last played them, but in most cases that's not what happens.
Personally, I still play both Half-Life and Half-Life 2 (I still got the full Orange Box installed on my laptop, heck that's the first thing I install everytime I switch laptops) and I play a lot of Abandonware and retro games that I still find much better than the current alternatives.
Newer experiences don't automatically mean that they are better than the previous ones just because they're fresher. Heck, even some newer games are less substantial in both content and complexity than older games. For example, you give the Skyrim vs Morrowind comparison; while Skyrim is indeed an amazing Elder Scrolls game (my personal favourite, it dethroned Daggerfall), it doesn't have a lot of the complexity that Morrowind or Daggerfall had and in some aspects it has even less content, though it's much better executed and streamlined than those two games (except for the UI part), so while some people will adapt better to Skyrim, others will still prefer Morrowind or Daggerfall to it.
I'll end by saying that it's not a good thing to encompass the opinions of everyone who sees an older game as being the better alternative to a genre or anything else just by claiming that it's due to Nostalgia alone. That can be insulting and demeaning to the capacity of critical thought of a gamer.
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