Supposedly the sweet spot for game buyers is between 18 and 38.
Think about how that demographic has changed from 30-40 years ago.
The pandemic put a serious dent in the level of learning / brain
stimulation for school kids while that was going on, and even before
that their brains were being manipulated and diluted by social media algorithms. To them, gaming is pokemon on the phone, not
Civilization.
Then you have the folks 38+ who have played so many shit games they
paid for and regretted, then subsequently were flooded with free games
that they can't find time to play, that sitting at the computer for
hours in a typical turn based strategy is the last thing they're
interested in wasting their life doing.
There is probably a nostalgia audience for strategy games, but they
aren't likely to spend a lot of money or be eager early adopters.
When team based tactical first person multiplayer shooters emerged and
I started playing with organized teams, I realized that the level of planning, overall strategy, and tactics that were available in that
genre not only satisfied but overshadowed everything I originally
liked about strategy games like Civilization, or Empire on the Atari
ST, Ancient art of War and AAoW at Sea, etc. There was just no
comparison.
But consoles changed the multiplayer shooter landscape. And speaking
of consoles, that in itself probably didn't help the fate of the
strategy genre, which is typically not as well suited to a game
controller as a mouse/keyboard.
Today, a lot of the kids who would have gotten interested or even
addicted to strategy games are probably too distracted by teen girls
shaking their tits and ass on tik tok to notice much of anything else.
Growing up Googling "How Do I Do This Or That" has not exactly
exercised their brains, and upcoming AI capabilities isn't going to
improve that situation at all.
Rin Stowleigh wrote:
Growing up Googling "How Do I Do This Or That" has not exactly
exercised their brains, and upcoming AI capabilities isn't going to
improve that situation at all.
I don't share your lack of faith in AI.
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
On 25/05/2024 20:32, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
I'm certainly less interested in strategy titles than I used to be
probably because my gaming wants have changed more from a need to be challenged to a more 'relaxed' gaming experience. A simple example would
be what I want out of a CRPG. I just don't have a great deal of interest
in what's a good character build, how to use skills together for maximum effect or even combat tactics. I'm there for the story.
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
On 25/05/2024 20:32, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
I'm certainly less interested in strategy titles than I used to be
probably because my gaming wants have changed more from a need to be challenged to a more 'relaxed' gaming experience. A simple example would
be what I want out of a CRPG. I just don't have a great deal of interest
in what's a good character build, how to use skills together for maximum effect or even combat tactics. I'm there for the story.
On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.
Mike S. wrote:
On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson
<spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.
I'd like to see Disciples go to Disciples IV. Disciples III isn't too
bad but they have about a zillion pixels spinning animation whenever you visit your castle. What's good about Disciples is that it is like an
RPG with several parties. I got into it at first because of the similarities to Heroes. I won the Undead campaign in Disciples II. My Ghosts are unstoppable.
On 5/27/24 05:29, Lane Larson wrote:
Mike S. wrote:
On Sat, 25 May 2024 15:32:22 -0400, Spalls Hurgenson
<spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:
Do you find you've less interest in strategy games (assuming you had
any to begin with, of course)? Or are you just as deeply invested in
the genre as you used to be?
I think I still play strategy games about as much as I used to but
that isn't very much. RPGs are my genre of choice. But I do always
have one Civ game, Colonization, Heroes 3 and MOO and MOM installed.
I'd like to see Disciples go to Disciples IV. Disciples III isn't too
bad but they have about a zillion pixels spinning animation whenever
you visit your castle. What's good about Disciples is that it is like
an RPG with several parties. I got into it at first because of the
similarities to Heroes. I won the Undead campaign in Disciples II.
My Ghosts are unstoppable.
This game series seems to have passed me by, but reading up a bit on it
it looks rather like something I'd enjoy. Would it still be worth
jumping in to II or III?
My computer is 10+ years old so I'm used to playing older titles, so
from that point of view it wouldn't be an issue.
It's a horror story. Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end Alienware. I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating. What I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the
news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad. I
was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
Righteous was used to fry an egg. When is this shit going to stop? I bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up. My parents lost
some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
another computer. And it's still happening!
On 5/25/2024 4:28 PM, Lane Larson wrote:
It's a horror story. Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end
Alienware. I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating. What
I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the
news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad. I
was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
Righteous was used to fry an egg. When is this shit going to stop? I
bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up. My parents lost
some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
another computer. And it's still happening!
Don't buy pre-made gaming computers. You end up paying 2x (or 3x if
you're talking $3200!) what you would for a better optimized system with >cooling that works.
On Wed, 29 May 2024 03:36:58 -0400, Xocyll <Xocyll@gmx.com> wrote:
Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> looked up from reading the entrails of
the porn spammer to utter "The Augury is good, the signs say:
On 5/25/2024 4:28 PM, Lane Larson wrote:
It's a horror story. Say I come up with $3200 to buy the top end
Alienware. I bet I'd still have to deal with lots of overheating. What >>>> I'd like to do is break my computer over someone's head and get in the >>>> news, where it says that my computer was too hot and drove me mad. I
was appalled when I got this one home and Pathfinder: Wrath of the
Righteous was used to fry an egg. When is this shit going to stop? I >>>> bought too many computers in the 90s just to keep up. My parents lost >>>> some faith in me when I liquidated my stock portfolio to buy just
another computer. And it's still happening!
Don't buy pre-made gaming computers. You end up paying 2x (or 3x if >>>you're talking $3200!) what you would for a better optimized system with >>>cooling that works.
This depends.
A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the >>video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
the ram slots filled already.
You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big >>name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
I agree.
My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past /have/-
built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
cooling sufficient? Etc.
But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.
Oh sure, there are some boutique builders. Falcon Northwest's prices
are insane (about double anybody else) and throw in a lot unnecessary >'extras' (like being delivered in a heavy wooden crate). But I've
priced the stuff from some builders, then went out and searched for
the exact same price from retailers, and you know what? The builders
were competitive; sometimes a little more, and sometimes even a little
less than what I would pay if I bought all the components separately.
[note: that is, of course, assuming you buy from RELIABLE retailers.
Yes, I could find the components for a lot cheaper if I relied on EBay
or from sold by some six-letter company on Amazon Marketplace or from >AliExpress. But then you're never sure you're going to get what you're >promised, and that's just not the sort of hassle I'm interested in. So
in my pricing experiment, I stuck to more reliable - and admittedly
more expensive - sources. YMMV may vary depending on what level of
risk you're happy with.]
And if you're not the sort who enjoys tinkering with hardware -mixing
and matching components, figuring out how many amps your PSU /really/
needs, deciding what thermal paste is Right For You- then the value of >prebuilts absolutely skyrockets.
This depends.I agree.
A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
the ram slots filled already.
You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
cooling sufficient? Etc.
But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.
It's still going strong with a dual boot system XP/7, neither of which
has ever been reinstalled - it's amazing how stable a system can be once
you turn off all the useless cruft MS insists on installing by default.
On 29/05/2024 14:59, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
This depends.I agree.
A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
the ram slots filled already.
You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
cooling sufficient? Etc.
But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.
I haven't bought a pre-built for over twenty years but I think the price margins between them and DIY just aren't the same as before and also now there's lot's of companies that will allow you to pick pretty much the
parts you want. That was previously one of the big draws for me.
I did cheat a little bit with my last upgrade though as I had RAM + CPU pre-installed because installing the CPU is the one bit I never liked
doing.
Technically the CPU was never difficult since I've been doing it. Really
that was the crap heatsink and fan they came with with horrible plastic
spear like things that are supposed to twist into place but never seem
to requiring such force that you end up bending the motherboard, that
and futzing with the thermal paste.
CPUs have been hit harder in recent years as games have been optimized
for consoles, which typically have different architecture for that and
it doesn't work well when moved to PC.
Justisaur <justisaur@yahoo.com> writes:
CPUs have been hit harder in recent years as games have been optimized
for consoles, which typically have different architecture for that and
it doesn't work well when moved to PC.
I don't know how? Both Microsoft and Sony went to x86-64 in previous gen already (Xbone and PS4). Nintendo is Arm based but I AFAIK Nintendo
games don't come to PCs that often.
I feel I'm almost always GPU bound since I got a Gsync-compatible
monitor which goes up to 165 fps.
On 29/05/2024 14:59, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:
This depends.I agree.
A local computer shop offers prebuilts that are not bad value at all.
The caveat is they have almost no upgrade path except swapping out the
video card, since they tend to have lower end motherboards and have all
the ram slots filled already.
You are correct if it's brand name junk like Alienware or any other big
name, you get charged $500-1000 just to have their name on it.
My last two PCs were pre-builts. I could have -and in the past/have/-
built my own computers, but it's just easier to have somebody else do
all the work for me. Will that motherboard fit in the case? Is the
cooling sufficient? Etc.
But of course, the price was an issue. EVERYONE knows prebuilts are
more expensive. But you know what? Not necessarily.
I haven't bought a pre-built for over twenty years but I think the price margins between them and DIY just aren't the same as before and also now there's lot's of companies that will allow you to pick pretty much the
parts you want. That was previously one of the big draws for me.
I did cheat a little bit with my last upgrade though as I had RAM + CPU pre-installed because installing the CPU is the one bit I never liked
doing.
Just because it can go up to 165 doesn't mean you have to force
software to do so.
Sysop: | Keyop |
---|---|
Location: | Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, UK |
Users: | 483 |
Nodes: | 16 (2 / 14) |
Uptime: | 160:28:26 |
Calls: | 9,594 |
Files: | 13,676 |
Messages: | 6,149,309 |