MMORPG… The evil video game genre?
0Recently I came across a blogger’s post of a painting meant to depict, from the blogger’s comments, a World of Warcraft player in 30 years. The original post was really nothing more than a link to a painting and some very brief, seemingly tongue in cheek commentary.
The most interesting thing about the post, however, is that once it hit Digg comments began to flood in. The comments, mostly anonymous, formed up to draw a distinct line between people who played World of Warcraft and people who didn’t. After reading through these comments you almost felt as if you had been involved in a debate between two opposing factions.
Now obviously, the artist who created this painting wanted it to stir emotions and intended for discussion to be prompted surrounding their work. However, it strikes me as odd that there have been such lines drawn around World of Warcraft and, more broadly, around the MMORPG genre of games.
Why is it that this genre is seen as the ultimate evil of gaming?
Why is it that with all of the game formats available to be criticized, all carrying their own group of addicts, the MMORPG is seen as the one genre which is the monster?
More importantly, why do so many people who are obviously not involved with the games in any way feel such a strong desire to “save” those who enjoy playing them? I mean, obviously the people who are playing the games aren’t somehow being forced to play them. By their very definition, a game is meant to be a fun event… a hobby… a break from the daily grind. So why is it that people, going about their business enjoying theire hobby, have become such a target for “saving” that those not involved in their hobby feel the need to use the strongest possible motivating factor available to them to attempt to stop these gamers from playing their games?
I figured I would offer a little editorial content here on Finalint to try and provide a little perspective on this issue. Namely my perspective…
What did Firefox teach IE?
0I love open source products. I love the way they branch out and provide competition for each other from the same base code. I love the way the software is generally released often and I love the way that user feedback is the driving force behind the majority of changes.
Now I have another reason to love open source software. It forces proprietary software to evolve… even against the will of the author of that software.
I have long contended that in the future when we speak of Firefox in a historical sense the only benefit we will remember will be that it made IE better. I just didn’t expect it this soon.
About 10 minutes after my first test drive with IE7 I spent some time staring blankly at the Firefox icon on my desktop. I hated to admit it, but Microsoft had out Firefox’d Firefox.
Read on for why I think that…
First Post… Welcome to Finalint!
0So what do you say on the first post of a blog? I read so many blogs and I already maintain so many sites… but I don’t think I’ve ever seen anything appropriately original for the initial content on any of them. I don’t particularly expect this post to break that mold.
We’re blogging! “Who is we?”, you ask. Well “we” is currently just me. However, in the very near future I will be opening up this space to some of the people closes to me in this crazy joy ride we call life. These people have been hand selected by me to qualify for “friend” status in my very, very limited circle of close friends. As such, each of them has earned the right, if they so choose, to post entries into this site. Each person will have their individual space and each space will be uniquely theirs… to say what they want, how they want, when they want. It should serve as nothing more than a sounding board for an amazingly diverse group of people who I consider some of the best people on Earth.
I guess that pretty much wraps up what needed to be said for the first post. If you have more questions about how this site will be, where it came from or the type of people who will be contributing to it take a look at the “About Us” page. It outlines the basics better than this, the overrated and anti-climactic first post.