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The Aging Gamer

An anonymous reader writes "There is a short article at the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle about the surprising statistic that a large potion of computer gamers are over 35. This actually makes sense, since many of them began gaming in the 70's. A short and semi-interesting read."

294 comments

  1. Slashdot: home of the semi-interesting read by wadetemp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Please refrain from from posting semi-interesting comments lest this entire thread become only semi-interesting.

    1. Re:Slashdot: home of the semi-interesting read by wadetemp · · Score: 2

      Gotta love it when people with good karma get modded "offtopic."

      I mean really... CmdrTaco should tweak the slashcode a bit to include a "semi-offtopic" moderation for cases where the story is, well, you know.

    2. Re:Slashdot: home of the semi-interesting read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Slashdot moderator pool has proven me wrong once again...

      This is not the last you'll hear from me...

  2. First post!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    woo hoo.... So anyways, don't all the gamers die at age 22 from an 86 hour gaming session?

  3. Hmmmm....the old Commador by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    It was just like yesterday, hopefully it won't be limited to majority of it on Windows where people like Steve Ballmer can gloat or scream like a little girl(see below).

    1. Re:Hmmmm....the old Commador by penguin_punk · · Score: 1, Funny

      My Commodore came with a spell checker program.

      --
      HURD - Hurd's Under Research & Development
    2. Re:Hmmmm....the old Commador by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

      Hey, when your deslexic(not that sever) it becomes a bit of a problem, and this is the internet where your suppose to spell everything as fast as possible and become uber leet. h3y, wh3n ur d3513xic(n07 7h47 53v3r) i7 b3c0m35 4 bi7 0f 4 pr0b13m, 4nd 7hi5 i5 73h in73rn37 wh3r3 ur 5upp053 70 5p311 3v3ry7hing 45 f457 45 p055ib13 4nd b3c0m3 ub3r 1337.

  4. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  5. In another surprising study... by bravehamster · · Score: 5, Funny
    In another surprising study, the same thing was found to be true of Britney Spears fans.

    --
    ---- El diablo esta en mis pantalones! Mire, mire!
    1. Re:In another surprising study... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, I think Britney Spears would be a good fuck!!!

    2. Re:In another surprising study... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 3, Funny

      Or at least a "short and semi-interesting" one. :-)

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    3. Re:In another surprising study... by MickLinux · · Score: 1

      There are 50 people funning for Miss America, and only two running for US President, because it doesn't matter if we pick the wrong Miss America -- but gosh darn, everything could fall apart if we pick a president who wasn't qualified.

      Better give em a choice from only two. That way we can be sure.

      BTW... "fig"? Wouldn't be Class of 91 VA Tech Thomas Hall, would it?

      --
      Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    4. Re:In another surprising study... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 1
      Nope, not me. Sorry. LOL

      It's a suprisingly common nickname. At least, when your last name is Newton...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
  6. short and semi-interesting by Maddog_Delphi97 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "A short and semi-interesting read."

    That's good, because most of us gamers are also short and semi-interesting as well...

    1. Re:short and semi-interesting by oO0OoO0Oo · · Score: 0

      Don't you mean "semi- and short-interested"?

      --
      We Are Familiar With Elephants By Virtue Of Their Size.
    2. Re:short and semi-interesting by Flounder · · Score: 1
      That's good, because most of us gamers are also short and semi-interesting as well...

      I resent that remark. I'm at least 6'2", thank you very much!

      --

      No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

    3. Re:short and semi-interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a hideous 8-foot tall monster, I laugh at your puniness.

      You're welcome very much.

    4. Re:short and semi-interesting by kubrick · · Score: 2

      That's good, because most of us gamers are also short and semi-interesting as well...

      Speak for yourself! I'm tall and completely not interesting. :)

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    5. Re:short and semi-interesting by quinto2000 · · Score: 2

      As an 18 foot semi, i resemble that remark.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un post
  7. Another interesting statistic.. by He+Was+Gamecubed · · Score: 4, Funny

    Another anonymous reader points out a not-so-suprising statistic: 92.4% of /. editors failed elemtary spelling exams.

    1. Re:Another interesting statistic.. by Jerf · · Score: 5, Funny

      The smallest fraction with integral dividend and divisor that produces .924 is 231/250. (3*7*11 / 5*5*5*2)

      Empirical observation suggests that your implicit claim that there are 19 (250-231) Slashdot editors that can spell is false, unless you can produce 19 such editors. (Difficult, since the entire universe of discourse is what, six people?)

      I suspect something has gone wonky with your math, and suggest you correct it posthaste. Alternatively, you can clarify what you mean by a fractional editor.

      For the humorless, :-)

    2. Re:Another interesting statistic.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Another anonymous reader points out a not-so-suprising statistic: 92.4% of /. editors failed elemtary spelling exams."

      Yup, and 110% of 'em also failed introductory statistics, too!

    3. Re:Another interesting statistic.. by quinto2000 · · Score: 2

      Geez, that's terribly pedantic. I mean, technically "92.4% of /. editors failed elemtary spelling exams" isn't a statistic, but it does match common usage of the word.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un post
    4. Re:Another interesting statistic.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be truly humourless, 73/79 is also 0.924 to 3sf :)

    5. Re:Another interesting statistic.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This should really be a +6 Funny.

  8. and how many are single ... by pleclair · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would be more interested in seeing how many of these people are unmarried ... or divorced as a direct result of gaming

    1. Re:and how many are single ... by DoctorPepper · · Score: 5, Funny

      I'm currently 43 and on my second marriage. My first marriage ended in divorce, not because of gaming, but becuase of hacking. I would practically lock myself in the room with my computer and write code on the weekends. Boy was I stupid back then! Now I just don't lock the door :-)

      --

      No matter where you go... there you are.
    2. Re:and how many are single ... by Life2Short · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well I'm 39 and single. Got my first Atari at the tender age of 12-13, back when they were Sears' Video Arcades. I can recall one girlfriend that my "hobby" cost me particularly clearly. I met her while I was living in London. I guess I wasn't spending enough time with her, because one night after work she called me over to a crowded pub near our workplace (she'd been there drinking since about 3pm). She proceeded to pick a fight with me and in the middle of this crowded bar she yells, "YOU WOULD RATHER PLAY WITH YOUR STUPID COMPUTER THAN HAVE SEX WITH ME!!!" Things got very quiet in the pub very fast. Actually, it wasn't really fair. What she said was only true PART of the time.

    3. Re:and how many are single ... by Misch · · Score: 2

      Yeah... the part that was wrong was that the computer was only stupid part of the time.

      --

      --You will rephrase your request for me to go to hell. Goto statements are not acceptable programming constructs
    4. Re:and how many are single ... by aebrain · · Score: 4, Funny
      I'm currently 43 and on my second marriage.
      44 and still on my first - and we've just had our first child, after 20 years of wedded blitz.

      Started programming at age 9 back in 1967, and the first computer game I played was on an IBM-360 back in 72. Star Trek, no less. First game I ever programmed was on an HP-65 programmable calculator a few years later.

      So my advice is - don't think you'll be "old" in 2030. Save up some good stories about how the Net used to be free, how 2 GigaHz was a fast machine, how we only dreamed of having a Petabyte of main memory on our machine - which was on a desk, not wearable/implanted.

      --
      Zoe Brain - Rocket Scientist
    5. Re:and how many are single ... by MeatMan · · Score: 1

      Most that are divorced were before starting gaming. See... it's not the gaming that drove the marriage to divorce, it's the marriage that drove them to gaming. Hey, it beats sitting in the john for two hours pretending to take a dump just so you can read your magazine and get away from the ol' battle ax for awhile.

    6. Re:and how many are single ... by MyHair · · Score: 2, Funny

      And we had to walk uphill in the snow to flip 8 switches to program our computers. That's right, we programmed in 8-bit machine language, sonny! But damnit, we were GLAD to have those switches! They gave us character. Your generation should try programming with switches, too.

      Slacker.

    7. Re:and how many are single ... by pleclair · · Score: 1

      actually, my comment was only half joking ... i'm only 26, and i do physics for a living (postdoc now) but, for certain 3 of my previous girlfriends left me because I worked too much ... they'd call at 11pm asking when I'd get home, I'd respond "oh, pretty soon, this experiment is going well." now that I'm desperately single, I realize the error of my ways ... the experiment can be done tomorrow, your girlfriend may be *gone* tomorrow* so, my point, if any, was that this gaming thing seems to be the same sort of dangerous obsession as research, coding, gambling, etc, which we XY-types are all too susceptible to. DoctorPeper's reply seems to support this, as do the anectodes of nearly all of my science/cs geek friends. sure, I do know some happily married/attached geeks, plenty of the, but the percentage seems awfully low compared to my non-technical friends ... my drunken $0.02. -pat

    8. Re:and how many are single ... by badzilla · · Score: 1

      Switches, bah LUXURY! We used ter ave BARE WIRES that we ad ter JOIN UP in HEX!

      --
      "Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace." V.Stone, Microsoft Corporation
    9. Re:and how many are single ... by Martigan80 · · Score: 1

      Gaming has strengthened my marriage. My wife loves it when I game because I don't bother her when she cleans, cooks, does the laundry, or when she is taking care of the garden!

      --
      This SIG pulled due to lack of funding. (This damn war is costing too much!)
    10. Re:and how many are single ... by back_pages · · Score: 5, Funny

      My girlfriend always tells me that if my computer and she fell into the ocean, I'd save my computer first. I always tell her that's not true, because the computer would already be screwed by the salt water at that point and a total loss. Even though I'm telling her that I would save her first, she is still mad at me. Women! It's so difficult to understand their proprietary architecture!

    11. Re:and how many are single ... by BobRooney · · Score: 2, Informative

      The moral of the story is when your wife/gf walk in while you're coding and jump on your lap blocking the screen...overlook the fact that they arent transparent and give em some sweet loving. The code will not feel neglected and the code will still love you 5 minutes later, (okay 10 mins with foreplay).

    12. Re:and how many are single ... by WeeLad · · Score: 3, Funny

      But your girlfriend might be able to swim. Your poor computer, on the other hand, is probably not as strong of a swimmer. Surely you could reuse the case.

      --
      Seriously, Don't take anything I say seriously.
    13. Re:and how many are single ... by Pr3d4t0r · · Score: 1

      Fortunately my girlfriend didn't cause such a scene. She did spend an early "date" at my office watching me play Myst all afternoon and evening. I didn't have a computer at home at the time. Perhaps she saw something in the way I gathered those blue and red pages... we've been married for 5 years now.

    14. Re:and how many are single ... by trixillion · · Score: 1

      LOL, damn I almost pissed myself that was so funny.

    15. Re:and how many are single ... by digitalgiblet · · Score: 1
      Here's what I !love about slashdot... The post I'm replying to is really, really funny, yet the folks with "mod" power have not modded it up. Guess he should have bashed Microsoft...

      So that this isn't a totally off topic post: I'm 34 and began gaming with Pong in the arcades, followed by Atari (Sears) and the whole line of Commodore computers.

      Using books and the Commodore Vic 20 I learned to program in Basic. Skip forward many years and I'm building enterprise systems in Java and Oracle and playing games with my children. My 5 year old loves Aliens vs. Pred 2... ;-) He also is getting pretty good at coming up with ideas for games which I'm hoping to get time to build one day...

      Please mod me to -9 x 10^2000 and call me an off-topic troll! It builds character!

    16. Re:and how many are single ... by naarok · · Score: 1

      Hey that's not right! If you grab your computer fast enough, you can probably save a good portion of it. Remember, harddrives are pretty tightly sealed. Your girlfriend (even if she can't swim), will probably be able to flail about long enough for you to gently put your computer down and save her. Besides, cold water will probably enhance your girlfriend, but definately not your computer.

    17. Re:and how many are single ... by TheLoneGundam · · Score: 1

      We were so poor we programmed light bulbs using only one switch. But we couldn't agree on a standard. OneBulbians wanted 0=off 1=on, ZeroBulbians wanted 0=on and 1=off. There ensued, of course, a bit-ter dispute.

    18. Re:and how many are single ... by cmdrwhitewolf · · Score: 1

      And worse - you didn't alert the media that you found a woman that *actually* publicly announced she wanted to have sex...

      Talk about an even lower statistic!

      --
      [Now, I'm off to lift my le... Um, visit... at another place.]
  9. I'd be an old gamer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    If I were born earlier, but I'm just too young to qualify.

  10. Re:Bad typo by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 4, Funny

    Large "POTION"? That's nasty. And a spell check wouldn't pick that up.

    Sure it would:

    It looks like you're trying to mix an invisibility potion, but you used three newt eyes instead of the correct number, four.

  11. Linux Games by billd · · Score: 4, Funny
    I'm getting pretty good at Frozen Bubble & I'm way over 35 (hey, it happens)

    My son however is a better example of an avid gamer. He's been playing Starcraft solidly for the past 2 weeks (school hols) including several overniters.

    Seems a bit excessive to me, but then, I'm not addicted

    ... to gaming that is... Beer on the other hand...

    --

    -----

    For great justice!

    1. Re:Linux Games by $0+31337 · · Score: 1, Troll

      Wow... So either you're truely a horrible parent or you're an example of a very good troll. You admit that your son is addicted to starcraft, then you say that he's been gaming straight for two weeks including overniters? Did you miss the article about the Korean gentleman dying from a mere weekend of gaming? Jesus... Gaming is fun but two straight weeks of anything (with the exception of breathing I suppose) isn't good for anybody.

    2. Re:Linux Games by billd · · Score: 5, Interesting
      DO you think that makes me a truly horrible parent! Parenting is not that easy, I'm trying. Really. Would you recommend that I ban him from the computers? Would that make me a good parent?

      Look maybe I exaggerated a bit. He has eaten, he has slept - a bit. I read the Korean thing. I'm trying to give him some space while school's out. But I'm willing to consider alternatives, if it will help him to have a happier life.

      Geez, give me a break $0 elite; some constructive suggestions would go down well........

      --

      -----

      For great justice!

    3. Re:Linux Games by scott1853 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wrong. Being a bad parent would be not even knowing what your kid has been doing for the last two weeks. This guy knows. And if you force a kid to stop whatever they are doing for no good reason other than "because so elite said so" then they're just going to get pissed off at you and nothing's solved. Then the kid's going to be angry and forced to find something else fun to do before he was prepared to which sounds like a good path toward all sorts of problematic behavior.

      You sound like you don't have kids yourself and you're one of the armchair parents like the ones that run this country. You know the type, the ones that think that they should have complete control over the raising of every child in the country yet can't manage their own family.

    4. Re:Linux Games by $0+31337 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are correct, I don't have any children however answer me this.. would you let your child watch television for two weeks straight? Don't get me wrong, gaming is fun and yes, I agree that taking gaming away wouldn't be a solution here. I simply don't believe that just because you know where your kid is and what he/she is doing (Oh little billy is fine, he's still in front of the computer for the second week straight) makes for a very good upbringing.

    5. Re:Linux Games by $0+31337 · · Score: 2

      Geez, give me a break $0 elite; some constructive suggestions would go down well........

      Okie Dokie, How about going out and playing catch, build a model, take him hunting or fishing, rent a good movie, etc. I just don't think sitting in front of a computer for two weeks straight is a good thing. You wouldn't let him watch TV for two weeks straight would you? Playing Starcraft isn't very far from that.

    6. Re:Linux Games by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      Well, for comparison, my son is 8 and he gets 30mins of computer game time a day, 1 hour on weekends. Of these, I encourage him to play games with some thinking/strategy like Incredible Machine or Ages of Empires II. No shoot 'em ups (I think the graphics/violence in AOEII is pretty tame.)

      His favorite games are the SNES9x simulator and a cD of rom's. I have fun with these to (the classic Mario games, etc). and they are cheap!

    7. Re:Linux Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're also a scum-sucking pirate. I hope the DMCA and BSA descend on your doorstep in the name of the almighty corporations! It's people like you who make software companies not make the profit they are entitled to.

    8. Re:Linux Games by scott1853 · · Score: 4

      I'm in front of a computer for the 728th week straight. What's your point? You probably spend a good deal of time in front of the computer too, hence the /. account. Who freaking cares? Who says it's wrong to spend your time doing a completely legal activity.

      I have a 4 year old son. He spent about 3 weeks playing games on the computer. He spent another 4 playing Mario 64, and another 2 playing Zelda 64. Now he's tired of playing video games. Guess what, his brain didn't fall out, he isn't wandering the street with a loaded shotgun, and he's not out smoking on the street corners. Everybodies different, you do realize that right? You also realize that they're different because of different life experiences right?

      Final point: children learn SOMETHING from EVERYTHING.

    9. Re:Linux Games by scott1853 · · Score: 2


      So you're son isn't allowed to play Quake because it's "bad", but you have no problem utilizing father/son bonding time to download warez?

      Hmmm, violence = "bad", stealing = "good". Oooh, oooh, I know, you're training your son to be a TV evangelist!

    10. Re:Linux Games by $0+31337 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      You probably spend a good deal of time in front of the computer too, hence the /. account.

      Yup. Make my living as a DBA hence I'm in front of the computer a lot of time

      Guess what, his brain didn't fall out, he isn't wandering the street with a loaded shotgun, and he's not out smoking on the street corners.

      Ummm... Ok lets see how to tackle this brainer of a response. First, he's 4 so I doubt he could heft a loaded 12 gauge shotgun whilst walking the street. I also doubt that even the most braindead of clerks would sell him a pack of cigs... But hey, He's only 4... Give him a few more years in front of the TV and we'll wait and see.

      Final point: children learn SOMETHING from EVERYTHING.

      Yuuuuuup... I'm sure that if they stick a fork in their eye they'll quickly learn not to do it again.. doesn't mean they should have done it in the first place though does it?

    11. Re:Linux Games by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      Hmm...obviously, you haven't even SEEN Clerks!

    12. Re:Linux Games by billd · · Score: 1
      Okalie Dokalie. I can deal with that.There are some good suggestions. I've already tried some similar things.

      Trouble is he really seems keen on the orthographic style games. To his credit he's become quite good at it. If you get on to starcraft he's calling himself SNEG - try and beat him [school restarts Monday so be quick]. The skill improvement over the past week has been awesome.

      I just wish someone would invent a homework game that grabbed as much attention.

      --

      -----

      For great justice!

    13. Re:Linux Games by palo0019 · · Score: 3, Funny

      If only all parents were smart enough to limit their child to 30 minutes of pirated games a day! What a saint!

    14. Re:Linux Games by scott1853 · · Score: 1


      Ohhhhh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize. Your parents must have been really terrible, I mean for you to become a DBA and all.

      Let's make this the last post before you hurt yourself trying to think up all these dumb-ass responses.

      DISCLAIMER: I don't normally flame, but when people absolutely insist on trying to have an intelligent opinion on something they know nothing about and won't admit it, I just really get annoyed. But I guess that just means I'm a bad parent.

    15. Re:Linux Games by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      Hey, c'mon there is a difference between abandonware and pirating the latest copy of GTA or whatever. Where, exactly, can I BUY a copy of SNES roms? Don't tell me to buy a console. I don't game on a TV. We don't have one.

    16. Re:Linux Games by billd · · Score: 2
      Yes, you wouldn't stick a fork in your eye twice. But children DO learn SOMETHING from EVERYTHING. The more time you spend with them the more you realise how resourceful, resilient and capable the human child is. I think it's when we hit late teens we are at our most vulnerable.(not used to the xtra hormones!)

      And if course being an adult requires having a skin thicker than rhinoceros

      --

      -----

      For great justice!

    17. Re:Linux Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I'm willing to consider alternatives, if it will help him to have a happier life.

      ... All that I can say is that without computers or the internet, I would've been forced to go out there and meet real people, enjoy real relationships - now I'm 23 and have never had a girlfriend, and suicide is a daily internal consideration. Socially mal-adjusted and, although unlike seemingly 90% of the "3l337 h4x0r" community, this is something I hate, not something I hold up as a badge of achievement...

      Letting kids do what they want to a degree is good, but letting them do it to excess is damaging. I don't care what it is - Video Games, Studying, Partying, Whatever...

      Moderation is king.

    18. Re:Linux Games by ELCarlsson · · Score: 1

      You clearly weren't a video gamer when you were growing up were you? I used to do the same thing when I had a vacation from school. Hell, I do the same thing now on the weekends(when my wife ain't around that is). I'm pretty sure my parents would rather have me sitting in the house not getting into trouble then wandering the streets bored outta my mind. Video games are also a release. There's nothing better after a bad day at work then hopping on a FPS and running around for a few hours shooting anything that moves.

    19. Re:Linux Games by palo0019 · · Score: 2

      Guess what, I AM gonna tell you to buy a console and play on a TV. Jesus fucking christ, what kind of excuse is that? Hey, I don't have any money so I'm just gonna TAKE my food and shelter. Don't get on MY back man, I don't have any money, I don't have any choice!

      A ton of SNES and NES games are being rereleased on the GBA. You can even buy a eReader and buy NES games to play on your GBA for $5 a pop. This is hardly abandonware, it's piracy.

    20. Re:Linux Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the context if this article I have to assume your kid is over 35 right?
      In which case its *time* you cut him some slack.

    21. Re:Linux Games by $0+31337 · · Score: 1

      Ohhhhh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize. Your parents must have been really terrible, I mean for you to become a DBA and all.

      I never claimed my parents were bad parents... They wouldn't let me sit in front of the TV or computer for 2 weeks straight.

      DISCLAIMER: I don't normally flame, but when people absolutely insist on trying to have an intelligent opinion on something they know nothing about and won't admit it, I just really get annoyed. But I guess that just means I'm a bad parent.

      Nope.. Doesn't make you a bad parent at all. The part about you letting your 4 year old play games for however long he wants, weeks at a time even, makes you a bad parent.

    22. Re:Linux Games by scott1853 · · Score: 1

      I'm just bustin your chops. But you don't have a TV? Or you don't have a console? Anyways, eBay is a great place to find cheap consoles on games for them too.

    23. Re:Linux Games by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      Hey, you know what? I have plenty of money. I just don't have a TV. I choose not to own one.

      I do have a computer. If someone sold a CD of ROM's and an SNES emulator like I have for $50, I'd buy it. But no one does. I guess technically, I could go buy the four or five we actually play used and I would be legal... but the publishers/writers of those games wouldn't see a dime out of that transaction. Oh wait, I could buy them new... but they don't sell them. You know what? I'm not gonna stay up nites worrying about the fact that I am "stealing" from the publishers/writers of those games when, in fact, there is no possible way to purchase those games in a way that would compensate them. If that's not abandonware, I don't know what the hell is.

    24. Re:Linux Games by tekunokurato · · Score: 1

      Heroine, on the other hand...

    25. Re:Linux Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait till you have kids. Then you can screw them up your way all you want. The guy at least knows what his kid is doing. Bad parenting is not knowing, not caring and/or both. His kid will turn out just fine and be a productive member of society.

      I had a cousin who, at 4 was glued to the superfamicon (nintendo with a different cartridge size and better games for the Asian Market). By the time he was 5, he played it almost every waking moment, just before catching the bus to school and right after getting home from school. (Just so you know, in asia school is in session for 2-3 hours longer than in the United States for every grade level - My 14 year-old cousin was coming home at 6 from high school and going a half day on saturday) He's in high school now and he's intelligent, artistic, and even athletic. When I first met my cousin at age 5, I thought he was totally screwed up, because society brainwashes us into believing the worst, but he's turned out just fine. If my kids get hooked on computers, then fine, I'll even introduce all the games that I've ever played to them just to get them to play some of the better thinking games too. I'll also introduce them to lots of other stuff. The brain needs to work. My son's three now and I'm holding off on introducing video games to him. I want him to be able to think in other ways too. He's very creative with Duplo(R) blocks and has created many fascinating 3-dimensional objects: dinosaurs, houses, trucks, lions, etc... He can figure out video games later. I did.

      The only possible problem for his 4 year old might be overnighters at that age. It may not be all that healthy. The problem will be that the kid dreams only of the game he's been playing. I've had those types of dreams if I played continuously for weeks at a time without breaks for other activities. They aren't nightmares, but I couldn't get them out of my head for days. Well, maybe his kid will be a guinea pig for us to see if all that all-night gaming is good for someone that age. If might just be ok. I did many overnighters as a kid and I'm still a functioning adult.

      I was in middle school when the video game craze hit. I actually had the first two handheld games on my block. They were a red LED football game and a red LED formula one game. I was also the first kid with a computer. All the kids came over to our house to play video games. I did go out an play in the daytime and swim (and I mean really swim and not just float or wade) for nearly 2 hours a day in addition to playing video games. During that the summers I typically slept only 4 hours a night. Which meant 20 waking hours for TV, Video Games, Computer Games, Swimming, Running, and playing D&D. My life was balanced between excercise and couch, so I am not a typical big fat slob. I even found a job close enough to bicycle to work everyday so I can remain healthy without wasting money for a gym membership. I still get by well on 6 hours of sleep and I don't ever sleep in on weekends like many typical Americans. I think I turned out ok, but maybe I'm genetically better suited for all this activity.

      I never took naps when I was growing up; I wanted to see the world and play. Naptime meant I had to lie down, bored out of my skull with my eyes were open for the hour when everyone else slept. My kids are already showing the same signs that they don't need as much sleep too. We can't force them to sleep, we can only put them in bed, where they may eventually fall asleep at 11pm and wake up at 7am. That's only 8 hours of sleep at the by the age of 2. So his kid, at 4 may have the same, for the lack of a better word, condition, where he doesn't need as much sleep.

      So, until you have kids of your own, STFU! Don't tell him or me how I should or should not raise a kid. Wait untill you have your own. Even when you have kids and still have the same opinion, I'll still tell your STFU, because your kids are not my kids and if they need the sleep fine. Mine apparently don't need so much.

    26. Re:Linux Games by CashCarSTAR · · Score: 1

      I can respect the whole idea that ROMS and emulation are unethical. I mean, for sure the producer is not being rewarded for the effort.

      But this really irritates me. People dump on ROMS and emulation and other similar activities...yet will tell you to go to e-bay or Electronics Bout. or Blockbuster to purchase used games. Last time I checked the producer doesn't recieve any benefit for used games either! In fact, from an ethical standpoint it's worse than downloading a rom..because there is profit involved. Even though I support the right of an individual to do this, doesn't mean that I have to think it's ethical. (In a nutshell, profiting from other people's work without giving the producer their is bad).

      I don't mean to rag on you..it's just that I've seen some pretty bad hypocrisy due to this. As far as I'm concerned, ethically, when I can't choose to reward the producer anymore, it's fair game. In this day and age it shouldn't be too difficult for a company to still market these products if they are intent on protecting them.

    27. Re:Linux Games by Pfhreakaz0id · · Score: 2

      amen. I made the same comment above. Like I said, I don't loose any sleep...

    28. Re:Linux Games by doc_side · · Score: 1

      doesnt matter, they're not yours. the companies still hold the right to those games.

    29. Re:Linux Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Super Famicon is just a Super Nintendo. Different names for different markets. They had a stupid easy to defeat hardware notch lockout to keep games from working between the 2 markets.

  12. An aging gaming population... by Blind+Linux · · Score: 2, Funny

    perhaps if the average age of gamers keeps rising, there will eventually be a bigger gamer "death" rate than "birth" rate?

    I'm scared to think of what would happen. heh.

    1. Re:An aging gaming population... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More quarters, more lives.

    2. Re:An aging gaming population... by Colin+Bayer · · Score: 1

      one would think that you'd get some telefragging going on.

      --
      Want Linux games? HERE.
  13. whew, I'm not the only one ... by Quino · · Score: 5, Funny

    I used to (somewhat apologetically) explain to people that I had spent last friday night playing GTA3 (I'm 28). I used to think I was a loser, but it's nice to know I'm part of a larger demographic! :) Then again, this doesn't necessarily mean I'm not a loser, just not the only one!

    1. Re:whew, I'm not the only one ... by Icefyre · · Score: 2, Funny

      Fight the societal norm! The real losers are the ones who *don't* stay in playing GTA3 on friday nights! (Or at least, the ones who feel the need to make fun of people who do.)

      --
      "I'm not a vegetarian because I love animals. I'm a vegetarian because I hate plants."
    2. Re:whew, I'm not the only one ... by PaganRitual · · Score: 2, Insightful

      nah fuck the apologising bit, if there is one thing that shits me more than anything else its the old games == losers line that is so frequently put forward.

      people will spend all friday night watching teevee instead of going out and thats apparently fine, but as soon as you turn on the computer you are a big time loser ...

      if it makes you feel any better, from last sunday morning thru to monday night i was on the comp playing games. and my g/f, who works weekends a lot, is working both days this weekend, so im up for more of the same ... and im 25 ... ill be playing games until i cant play em no more.

      anyone who feels the need to deride someone else for their choice of hobby is really the one that needs the life, not you :)

    3. Re:whew, I'm not the only one ... by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yep, agreed!

      I recently turned 31 myself, and last Xmas, I bought myself a PS2 and several games for it. Granted, I was always a bit selective about what I purchased/played. There seem to be quite a few "teenie-bopper" games out there that don't do anything for me.

      But how can you place an "age limit" on sports games, billiards games, flight simulators, well-done car racing sims, and any games with "mature" themes + good graphics, sound, and all around gameplay (like GTA3 for example)?

      As a matter of fact, one of the guys I worked with who was a few years older than me got hooked on PS2 after I kept telling him about the stuff available for it. (Initially, he wrote it off as kid stuff - but his interest was piqued when he heard about Gran Turismo 3 and the like.) I think he bought one "for his kid" as an excuse, and ended up playing it himself.

      In fact, I think one of society's big problems today is the number of folks who live in relative boredom and depression because of a self-inflicted lack of fun/hobbies. There's this prevelant sense that as you reach age 30 or so, you're "not supposed" to do lots of stuff anymore. (No more big car stereo upgrades.... no more video games.... yadda, yadda.) Screw that. I never want to grow old and be one of the "statistics" that sits around drinking beer in front of the TV, watching only football, baseball and/or hockey - goes to work, eats, and sleeps, and never really does anything else "for the fun of it".

    4. Re:whew, I'm not the only one ... by jimmyCarter · · Score: 1

      I also used to be in the same boat of (somewhat apologetically) explaining to people that I spend a lot of time's gaming (I'm also 28). But, there are a lot of reasons I can spew as to why it's not immature for someone of my age to be gaming. Here are a few:

      1. Economists often point to the surge of sales in board games during times of economic hardship (recessions, depressions, etc.). The reason being that once the initial investment is out of the way, these board games pay for themselves many times over if played enough. If I purchased Monopoly in 1933 for $2 and over the course of the next five years, put 200 hours into playing it with friends and family, what's the cost per hour break down to? Pretty damn cheap..

      2. What's the difference between a group of men fragging each other all night in 2002 and a group of men playing poker all night in 1956? Not much.

      --

      -- jimmycarter
  14. Think of gamers beyond retirement.. by lute3 · · Score: 5, Funny
    Currently we have phones with small games in them.

    With the technology available when these 35-year-olds are 70, they'll be able to have fully immersive games embedded in their walkers.

    1. Re:Think of gamers beyond retirement.. by cmdrwhitewolf · · Score: 1

      Complete with hearing aids, glasses, and cardio resuscitators for those pesky myocardio infarctions we'd get everytime we see a monster beat the c**p out of us in full 360 degree stereo!

      Heck, come to think of it, I'll be happy if they have anything like an "old gamer's home" with something decent to play. I simply dread the thought of getting stuck with only a checker board...

      And I can just see myself sitting at such a future gaming session -
      Old DM - "You see a troll."
      Old Gamer - "Eh? You want me to Roll? Damn, I hardly have the strength to pick up these pewter dice my daughter gave me..."
      Old DM, cupping his hand by his ear - "'puter? What computer - Dave, this is a paper & pencil RPG!"
      Old Gamer, twiddling with his hearing aids volume control - "I'm getting attacked with a rocket propelled grenade? I thought we were playing Dungeons & Dragons, not Twilight 2000..."

      --
      [Now, I'm off to lift my le... Um, visit... at another place.]
  15. Sounds like me... by eaddict · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Now that I am over 35 (egad! Going to hit 28h soon!) I can actually afford the games. The ones I buy would have been a heck of a lot of allowance or lawns in my day. In fact, I think this age thing also has to do with the fact that games are much better than they used to be too - from a hardware and software point. When I first started out there wasn't much available for my $3500 Leading Edge...

    --
    "If you are on fire you can just stop, drop, and roll. If you fall into Lava you are just dead." - my 5yr old daughter
    1. Re:Sounds like me... by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is what Sony figured out, and why the Playstation was such a success. It was the first console to have a real plethora of adult oriented games. Well Sony discovered two things as a result of this:

      1) There are lots of adults that want to play games.
      2) Adults have more money.

      Kids have to take whatever their parents will give them, adults can spend what they wish within the limits of their means. Unsupprisingly, this means that adults spend more on games.

  16. What about Consoles? by Anenga · · Score: 5, Funny

    What popular games were out on the PC platform in the 70's? Perhaps they're talking about Super Mario or Pacman?

    Does this same age group dominate the console market too? If so, then perhaps Nintendo and Playstation should change their target demographics. Stop selling games with "FREE Bike Decals!" and replace it with "FREE Car Insurance Estimate!"

    1. Re:What about Consoles? by MoneyT · · Score: 2

      I don't know about the 70's but the 80's (C64!!) had Mario Bros and pacman on the PC

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    2. Re:What about Consoles? by wnknisely · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Seriously?

      Star Trek (variants). I learned Linear Algebra working out how to move my ship around hyper-space on the Star Trek game a friend and I wrote on our TRS-80 model 1.

      Lemonade Stand on the Apple II+.

      There was a stock market sort of game that came standard with the Comodore Pet.

      Wumpus was big on the Kim MOE-1 (but you had to enter the code each time you wanted to play - we didn't have the cassette tape interface.)

      My favorite game was a Dungeons and Dragons game that I got the majority of the code from out of an article in Byte. We hacked the code up into a fun little game. I remember missing a date with my girlfriend - later my wife - because I was so excited about showing some friends a new monster and attack that I had coded.

      --
      In illa quae ultra sunt
    3. Re:What about Consoles? by Raiford · · Score: 2
      There were no PC's in the 70s if you mean IBM (introduced in 1981) or any clone of which we have the children of today. We had some great games on mainframes though. They were all text based and even some were multi-user. The geeks were nerds then and could be found in the engineering depts at universities staying up late at night basking in the eerie glow of a ancient monochrome CRT monitor or the annoying noise of a paper fed TTY terminal. Those were the days.

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
    4. Re:What about Consoles? by xtremex · · Score: 2

      Not true...I had a Commodore Pet in 1978/79 and my Uncle had a Kaypro (1977)

      --
      If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
    5. Re:What about Consoles? by Raiford · · Score: 1
      The Commodore was not considered a PC even though it looked like one and served as one. The PC was the IBM "PC". I don't know why the Commodore was not credited for really being the first. You never heard of Commodore clones.

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
    6. Re:What about Consoles? by cravian · · Score: 1

      Funny you should mention giving away free quotes for car insurance with a game as an incentive for older gamers.

      Recently in the UK Acclaim Entertainment software offered to pay the speeding fines incurred by people who bought their Burnout2:Point of Impact game. After several official (and semi-official) bodies voices their dispeasure they revoked their offer. Story Here.

      That said, it's legal to drive over 17 in the UK, so maybe targetting 'older' gamers will catch on. I hope so, I'm one and could do with cheaper insurance...

      --
      The obvious is blinding, that's why no-one sees it coming.
    7. Re:What about Consoles? by doghouse41 · · Score: 1

      The mainstays of the "PC" platform in the 70's included the commodore PET, Apple IIe and TRS-80. What we think of as the "PC" today (i.e. the IBM PC and compatibiles) was not even invented till '82.

      A favourite game on the original PET was a pretty accurate clone of Space Invaders (8K of 6502 machine code, no bit mapped graphics in those days of course, only 40x25 lines of a fixed character set. You could get blocky graphics @80x75 by doing strange things with the character set).

      On the Apple II, I remember a version of the original Colossal Cave adventure. (purely text based, mazes of twisty passages all alike, etc). Obviously a clone of the mainframe version. That game needed some serious hardware to run it. (48K, and gasp! a floppy disk drive)

    8. Re:What about Consoles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PCs in the 70's? You idiot. However, in the (late) 80's, Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards... hee heee heeeee

    9. Re:What about Consoles? by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      Stop selling games with "FREE Bike Decals!" and replace it with "FREE Car Insurance Estimate!"

      Who wouldn't like some new bike Decals! Even just for their laptop / shower screen / Merc. I long for the day that everything I buy has some crappy little stickers like cereals used to have! They were great. You could stick em anywhere. You could draw penises and beards and boobies on them. You could write your sisters name on the ugly one. Nothing funnier on a Saturday morning.

    10. Re:What about Consoles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you've been a loser gaming fag that long? You were playing Zaxxon off of a cassette tape instead of jerking off then, and learning what the pee pee was used for, and now you have never seen pussy pink in your life, you are too busy playing RPGs and writing stupid stories that make no sense, and trying to be "insightful" on /.

      HA HA HA HA HA HA. You are priceless, Tevis, an endless source of jesteresque amusement. Pathetic, too!

    11. Re:What about Consoles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My School had a (yes one singular) CBM PET, which we had to write our own games for, or copy listings from magazines...
      That Green Screen with the ASCII characters creeping across it..
      Ah those were the days, young people today don't know their born with their 256 colours and their 64k of RAM :-)

    12. Re:What about Consoles? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh man! Another PET programmer, I thought we were all dead.. mabey we're just all married.

      I forgot about the AppleII thats what my school got after the PET, then the 80's arrived and(being in the UK) we got "BBC" computers.
      They were weird, they had an analogue port, it was cool for games writers not averse to spending time in the metalwork workshop.

    13. Re:What about Consoles? by _Spirit · · Score: 1

      Lemonade Stand ! I remember that one :-)

      I didn't read all the way thru the post, I thought aging gamer might be me :-) (I'm thirty)

      --

      beauty is only a light switch away

    14. Re:What about Consoles? by labradort · · Score: 1

      As I remember it, it started with Pong on the TV set. It was cheap enough, and it was hours of fun and not complex to learn.

      I bought the TRS-80 model I and played FS1 (flight sim), which loaded from the cassette recorder. You couldn't even see the plane - just a crude instrument panel and the outside 10 x 10 grid world with paper thin mountains on the north.

      Don't forget that not all games are of the type you are typically thinking of in the best sellers list. There are thousands of people interested in flight simulators and many of them don't buy the latest and greatest release everytime. My Dad, over 65, flies MS Flight Sim 2002 as a substitute for being able to fly real planes as he used to. If I had not bought him that, he would have stuck to flying with Flight Sim 98.

      That is, playing games does not equate with buying games, as one can continue to play something they enjoy for many years. I think this would account for the oddity that many people feel is present in this report of over 35 age and game playing. I can see Tetris, Starcraft and some others contining to be played for many years after they peak on the best sellers list.

      If anything, I'd think game playing would be associated with free time. Anyone who has free time and has a computer will likely play a game they enjoy.

      There are also many more single people over 30 than there were years ago. I know of a few unmarried. Marriage and having kids will kill your free time. I am in this situation. I have to wait for 8 or 9 years and then I can play Starcraft with my oldest son.

      As for the box stuffers, Microsoft had a contest for a real Cessna aircraft with its latest flight sim.

  17. Curious ailment for older gamers by 0ddity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am sure everyone knows what "Nintendo Thumb" is. Playing so long that you form blisters on top of blisters.

    What kind of health hazards do we need to watch out for in the future.

    Chronic arthritis of the thumbs is one thing but what happens when we all start gaming in VR?

    1. Re:Curious ailment for older gamers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What kind of health hazards do we need to watch out for in the future.

      AutoPr0n wrist.

    2. Re:Curious ailment for older gamers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what happens when we all start gaming in VR?

      the general fitness level of gamers would increase a lot, or less people would play - it would mean physically running around! and hauling a 20kg cylindrical object to simulate the guass gun! ;)

    3. Re:Curious ailment for older gamers by Cyno01 · · Score: 2

      well of course all aging gamers should be careful of this

      --
      "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
    4. Re:Curious ailment for older gamers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want blisters on top of blisters, row. It's a lot healthier.

  18. They're still alive? by Capsaicin · · Score: 4, Funny

    Unbelievable, they have been playing computer games for over 20 years and it hasn't killed them yet?

    --
    Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    1. Re:They're still alive? by saskboy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, that poor wuss who was playing for only 86 hours, in Korea, died just the other day. Makes you wonder where these gamers get their stamina from? Powerups? Did they find secret locations that have eluded the rest of us? Are they just camping?

      --
      Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
    2. Re:They're still alive? by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 2, Funny

      Silly person -- you don't die until you stop gaming and head to the bathroom. Don't go!

    3. Re:They're still alive? by coupland · · Score: 2

      No, but they're probably stone-cold killers one and all. After all, computer gaming trains you to be a killer, it's like murder simulators.

      I'm gonna go watch some Kung-Fu movies since they'll turn my fat ass into a lean fighting machine...

    4. Re:They're still alive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Crumbs in keyboard?

    5. Re:They're still alive? by zurab · · Score: 3, Funny

      Unbelievable, they have been playing computer games for over 20 years and it hasn't killed them yet?

      It's weird. I thought they should be out on the street killing people or imprisoned for life. Isn't that what happens from computer games?

    6. Re:They're still alive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I thought they should be out on the street killing people or imprisoned for life. Isn't that what happens from computer games?

      Not if you only play Tetris!

  19. Re:Bad typo by billd · · Score: 1

    The actual error was grammatical: a large potion of computer gamers is over 35 [gallons]

    --

    -----

    For great justice!

  20. pfft cramps by waspleg · · Score: 4, Funny

    men use bandaids and soldier onward princess zelda needs our attentions and school can only stay shut down from sheets of ice for so long..

    that's when games focused on playability (read: FUN) rather than flashy (8 bits, mmm) graphics

  21. Large Potion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Where is that last large magic potion container at anyway? An old lady in the town in the woods said I needed it to get something special. Oh wait, this post isn't about old geeks still playing Zelda 2, is it?

    1. Re:Large Potion? by falzer · · Score: 1

      Maybe he meant potion of aging, which is why there are so many gamers over 35 years old.

  22. It's interesting... by Icefyre · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As games get more complex and kids are introduced to them at a younger age, the newest generation of gamers needs more of a challenge. (Believe me, it's embarrassing as a 19 year old to get 0wnt by 14 year olds in ut2k3.) I mean honestly, the original Mario just doesn't cut it anymore... we want plot, complexity, and a more realistic gaming experience. Imagine how insane games are going to have to be 10 years from now to hold kids' interest. I think gaming is becoming a part of our culture - just look at Korea where gaming is the equivalent of professional football here.

    --
    "I'm not a vegetarian because I love animals. I'm a vegetarian because I hate plants."
  23. why would anyone quit gaming? by w1r3sp33d · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I played pong when it was bleeding edge technology, why wouldn't I be excited about the great advances in games over the last several years or be looking forward to some of the new games coming out in 2003? I am part of a generation of kids who have had every system between the Atari 2600 and the Xbox, I would think that our consumer dollars would be very strong in this market. I just don't understand this being a surprise to anyone.

    1. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by danny256 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why would anyone quit gaming?
      I've been gaming for the last 14 years (I'm 20 right now) and every year that passes I find I enjoy games less and less. Nothing can ever bring me back to the highs I achieved with Mario 1 or Warcraft 2. Even though the games today have better graphics and are supposedly more advanced, I just don't find them fun, and it gets worse with every new game I get. I expect to stop gaming altogether within a year or two. I kind of think its like playing with lego or something, a lot of people just grow out of it as they get older. It is sad for me though, I havn't really found anything new to fill the void that games used to fill.

    2. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by freeweed · · Score: 2

      Games aren't really getting any worse, you're just losing the thrill of them being 'new'. Many folks in their 30s found Nintendo games to be of very poor quality, because they grew up playing on their Atari. Everyone goes through a phase where for a time, all new games really seem to suck. Eventually, most of us come back.

      Me, I got sick of console games right around the Playstation. 7 years later, I'm back full swing, enjoying the hell out of my Gamecube.

      And for the naysayers who want to talk about how all new games are the same, and boring.... you're not saying anything new. 90% of what came out for the NES was complete crap. Same for every system since. Finding the gems is what makes it all worth while.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    3. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got tired of just gaming at about age 15... Then I started hobby coding games. That's more addictive than any game i've ever played. New challenges popping up all the time in very different areas guarantees you'll newer be idle again :) Then there's also the social side in hanging out on irc with other game coders :)

    4. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by Aldurn · · Score: 1

      I agree. I used to be an avid gamer, possibly the best at Unreal Tournament, Quake I[I], and (Star|War)craft, but then it all sort of stopped being fun. I'm 19 right now, but I found gaming becoming such a small part of my life that I bought a Mac (while I know there are games for it [I have all of the games mentioned above], the popular games are always a short ways behind [like UT2003]). Granted, I'm very happy with the purchase, but I just don't see the attraction of gaming that I used to have.

      --
      char sig[120] = "\0"
    5. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by barfarf · · Score: 1
      Every generation has its own form of gamers. The gamers that grow up that say "games aren't as fun as they used to be" (I think) have definitely grown out of them because the novelty and surprise of seeing something so spectacular and new has largely worn out for them. I also think that for many, as they get older, it WILL be harder to fill that void - nostaligia of the newness and excitement of a new game as a kid is a tough contender. Once you get over that, a lot of games seemingly starts becoming a rehash of what's already been done.

      I know that I look back at when I used to walk (okay, so it was run) into an arcade as a kid, I'd feel the adrenaline rush as I'd hear and see a Space Invaders or an Asteroids game and watch the quarters line up on the bottom of the screen as people tried to reserve their games, and I remember plunking down $40 for a Defender game for the Atari 2600 thinking just HOW COOL it was to be able to play this at home!

      I'm 33, and like you, I have some extremely fond memories of games - just different ones. I posted this question a long time ago on the Virtual Hideout forums and near as I could tell the current mid-20's generation looked upon the Nintendo as their all-time favorite system. Clearly a huge chunk of my age group felt that way about the Atari 2600.

      I know I'm dating myself here, but as far as consoles go, I grew up on the Atari 2600, the Intellivision, the Vectrex, and (remember this?) the Microvision (the first portable cartridge based-system that at least I can remember). And man, do I have some great memories of playing Adventure and Slot Racers with my friends. Man! This stuff has come far!

      I'll definitely say one thing: I honestly believe that my burning interest in games helped in no small way to foster my interest in computers and led to my current career as a Senior Network Geek. I can tell that my 8 year old son is having the same new experiences that I had all over again with different game systems - only his fondest memories will be of playing games with his friends on the Playstation 2 and Xbox. I'm okay with that as long as it doesn't get in the way of his homework. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go get my rear kicked in UT2003 by some 15 year old that has waaaay more time to play than I'll ever have!

    6. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by Zastrossi · · Score: 1

      As a 28-year-old who's been gaming since he was 11 or 12, I do know what you're talking about. Much-loved games like EA Sports' NHL series (hey, I'm Canadian) are getting less interesting. So, I regularly think that maybe I'm getting less interested in computer games.

      Then I play a game like Medal of Honour, and am blown away by the immersive atmosphere and detailed graphics. It's the first game that ever made me think twice about shooting opponents (it gives one pause when they're screaming and crawling around, begging for mercy). More significantly, I think online gaming represents an important paradigm shift. There's Quake, and then there's Quake played online, and (this is really a truism now) they're totally different. For me, being able to play against human opponents makes all the difference and has breathed a lot of new life into tired genres like the first-person-shooter. Thanks. Z.

    7. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by DickK · · Score: 1

      With any luck I'll die at nice ripe old age while playing Civilization 17! Been gaming (board, paper and pencil, computer) for 45+ years and have not intention of stopping. Great mental exercise and stress relief. My kids are both >21 and play various games. We all like different stuff and we've all liked different stuff at various times. Gaming is one of those timeless and ageless kind of things that at least seems to keep the brain young while the rest of me sure isn't! 20+ years ago my wife interrupted me while I was playing an Atari2600 game asked me if I was ever going to "grow up". My answer's the same today--"I hope not!"

      --
      DickK
    8. Re:why would anyone quit gaming? by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why would anyone quit gaming?

      Because games get stale after a while, especially with most games pigeonholed into cliche-ridden genres: FPS, RTS, "character with attitude" platformer, racing, fighting, RPG. What eventually started bugging me is that most games are designed to take X hours to "beat." You buy the game, you plow through it, you see all the movies and all the levels and get the same experience out of it that everyone else does, and then you're done. So not only do you need a huge block of time to play, but you're just following a script. The cry for story-based games has made this much worse than it used to be.

      What I really want is to sit down for short bursts and play something unique. But instead it's like going to a video store that only rents movies like Collateral Damage and The Phantom Menace (ugh!), except that they're each 15 hours long.

  24. Re:Bad typo by dameron · · Score: 1
    Large "POTION"? That's nasty. And a spell check wouldn't pick that up


    Yes, but it would have no greater effect than a smaller potion, you'd just have to ingest more of it to get the desired effect.

    paraphrased of course,

    -dameron

  25. Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by puto · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok I am 32 years old. Here is what I played. Wasn't no Sega or Nintendo in my day.

    Pinball - Silverball Mania
    Pong - Cocktal Version, lost many a quarter(but pops snuck me into bars, cause that is where pong lived.

    Boot Hill - FPS? The Original death match.

    What about those wierd baseball games where you hat to bat at the balls with the stick on a lever?

    Shoot the bear with the 90 pound rifle?

    Then came the 2600 for me. I can play Combat by myself for hours.

    Breakout? You kicked its ass enough the bricks didnt come back.

    AS for being in the thirties. I still latch on too the odd game(gotta keep the kiddies in check cause I can't impress em with my cool Galaga skills).

    Now I am playing The Thing. Not so bad, the character barf and commit suicide.

    Puto

    --
    The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
    1. Re:Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ... cause I can't impress em with my cool Galaga skills ...
      Don't count on impressing them with your cool spelling skills either. I hope you're just a poser and not really a 32 year old illiterate.
    2. Re:Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by TobyWong · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Quick, call the spelling police! They will be very interested to hear about a message board spelling infraction. This guy is gonna do some hard time for sure!

      --
      - Toby
    3. Re:Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by FurryFeet · · Score: 2

      Then came the 2600 for me. I can play Combat by myself for hours.

      Dude, that should have been extremely boring, since Combat was 2 players only. Unless you played both tanks-planes, or just shot at the sitting enemy...
      That is, unless you had some weird-ass version of Combat that I would have killed to get at the time :)

    4. Re:Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by puto · · Score: 2

      Yeah combat was two players but I would fly the jets around and practice. The tanks I would drive around and practice shooting on the fly and angled shots.

      I think I was so amazes by it it didn't matter the number of players
      Puto

      --
      The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
    5. Re:Atari, Intellivision, and the arcade by cmdrwhitewolf · · Score: 1

      Actually, I messed around with it solitare style myself when a friend of mine & I accidently stumbled upon the tanks turning 'bug' which let you jump from on side of a wall to the other. We eventually figured out that you could not only do that, but jump from one side of the arena to the other, or to any of the four corners of the arena when you lined your tank up against the wall and then attempted to turn into the corner. (I loved getting my tank to spin through all four corners of the arena.)

      And eventually made for some very hilarious games between us after we both quickly mastered nearly every exploitation of the bug we could think of. Then we stumbled upon a way to exploit this bug a little more and shoot through the walls & corners... :->

      Plus I found out a few of these same tricks in Space War (or Space combat as the Sears VCS game was called.)

      So yes, spending hours playing a two player game by yourself does have it's points.

      - White Wolf

      --
      [Now, I'm off to lift my le... Um, visit... at another place.]
  26. we have the $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We are the only ones that can afford state of the art computers, graphics cards, monitors, and cdroms.. :)

    1. Re:we have the $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      butt i break in yo house and all is mine!

      - black kid

    2. Re:we have the $$$ by TheLoneDanger · · Score: 1

      Exactly. The percentage of older PC gamers is higher because of the high cost of the higher level PCs that are required to play the current games at decent levels of detail. New generations of videocards come out on a 6 month schedule and cost twice as much as any of the current consoles, while not necessarily offering better graphics unless the rest of your system is tooled up as well. Plus, because of the development cycles of games, even the newest games don't use most of the "exciting new features" that they advertise the cards with. I'm not down on PC gaming (I love it myself), but from the point of view of a teenager or a parent buying for their kids, a $200 console that plays games immediately and without problems vs. PCs that cost $2000 and needs upgrading and subscription costs for online games (though consoles do this now too)? Pretty soon PCs will be almost exclusively for the adults, though you'd never know it from all the "l337" 12 year olds playing online.

      --

      "But I trust in the people's capacity for reflection, rage and rebellion." -Oscar Olivera
    3. Re:we have the $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then again, nignog, after taking apart my PC rig, would you know how to put it all back together again?

      "Dizzamn! I doesn't know this shit!"

  27. In my case by djupedal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    While my kids interest grew to every platform in the catalog, I gradually got away from games altogether, except to check in on what I determined was the bleeding edge....I would try my hand once or twice a year just to see how the graphics, as an example, were advancing.

    Later, I decided that editing tech docs for a living was limiting my scope. I felt I was locked into one way of using a computer (or console) and that could not be good. I bought my own PS1 and several car racing titles just to do something different with a processor and display and how my mind was relating. I figure as long as this is how I earn my living, it doesn't hurt to exercise hand-to-eye coordination in the interest of keeping things (mentally) limber.

    Yes, I remember spending hours playing PONG and Parsec. Things have come a long way, and my kids are much more into it than I am, but I still find GT3 a great way to waste an afternoon.

  28. so true... by StickMang · · Score: 1

    I remember my parents telling me about the first time they played pong. My dad is currently addicted to everquest, and we played tons of games from the old commodore 64 days to the present. Of course there are lots of older gamers, old people are bored!

  29. Slashdot by Anenga · · Score: 4, Funny

    Semi-News for Nerds. Stuff that semi-Matters.

    1. Re:Slashdot by IPFreely · · Score: 1

      Thank you for not saying Semi-Nerds.
      I would have been really insulted If you thought I wasn't the real thing.

      --
      There is nothing so silly as other peoples traditions, and nothing so sacred as our own.
  30. Thanks.... by fluxrad · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...the surprising statistic that a large potion of computer gamers...

    LAN Party in a bottle?

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
  31. Demographics by oO0OoO0Oo · · Score: 1, Funny

    "FREE Car Insurance Estimate!"

    That's not so bad. I will be scared when it's "Buy Pacman Gold Anniversary Edition and get your free Modern Maturity subscription now!"

    --
    We Are Familiar With Elephants By Virtue Of Their Size.
  32. Voodoo Mathematics by greenhide · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This actually makes sense, since many of them began gaming in the 70's.

    Right, this makes sense. If you are 35 and you are gaming, you must have been doing so your entire lifetime.

    How about this instead: Someone who is 35 now was in their mid teens when arcade games were really big in the mid eighties. They started playing the games non-stop. Most of them did not play on computers at home, they went out to an arcade.

    Fast forward ten to fifteen years. Home game consoles are so cheap and so powerful that they're better than going to the arcade. The same people who went to the arcade started buying the game consoles.

    Which brings us to today. Believe it or not folks, I actually know some people who are over 35 years old, and they might actually fool you into thinking they weren't wearing Depends. Most of them still like doing the things they did when they were in their late teens and early twenties, which includes gaming.

    Now, if the study had claimed that the average gaming age was 40 or 45, that would have been a little harder to swallow.

    --
    Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
    1. Re:Voodoo Mathematics by freeweed · · Score: 2

      I actually know some people who are over 35 years old, and they might actually fool you into thinking they weren't wearing Depends.

      Now, if the study had claimed that the average gaming age was 40 or 45, that would have been a little harder to swallow.


      Why? Do people suddenly start wearing Depends at age 40 or 45?

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    2. Re:Voodoo Mathematics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean I can take mine off?!!!

  33. Re:I would have to say... by altairmaine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > That is quite scary, considering that gaming is at an all time high right now...so, if in 20 years
    > 90+% of gamers are over 35, i wouldn't be shocked....

    Ummmm. That really doesn't make any sense. The birth rate isn't plummetting catastrophically. I teach high school - and I assure you that a large fraction of the 14-year-olds on down are quite hooked. They'll be 34 in 20 years, and I don't see any likely reason that gaming would stop gaining recruits. 10 or so to 35 is an awfully big fraction of the population, much more than 10% - even if they WERE underrepresented in the gaming group, they'd claim more than 10% of it. And I see such an underrepresentation as unlikely. A higher fraction of today's youth are gamers, for instance, than were gamers in the 70s.

  34. Your sig by diaphanous · · Score: 5, Informative

    "REAL geeks think that Y2K happens in the year 2048."

    Don't you mean 2038? Assuming of course, that you are referring to the problems that may occur in 2038 when the number of seconds since the beginning of the UNIX epoch will overflow 32 bit integers.

    ~Phillip

    1. Re:Your sig by decaying · · Score: 1

      2048 = 2 * 1024 = 2k

      --
      ----- One piece short of Legoland
    2. Re:Your sig by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It got me too the first time - it was the first problem year that popped into my head and I just figured - eh - probably got a digit wrong.

      But as the other respondents say, there's a more basic answer. I guess I'm just getting ahead of myself envisioning the truckloads of cash I'll be collecting from my steady investment in short-term thinking.

      And hey - have we planted the seeds to build the trust funds for the children of the poor techies in 2050 who missed the train? We should start thinking about that now - wouldn't want to wait to the last second...bwaahahahaha!

    3. Re:Your sig by diaphanous · · Score: 4, Funny

      Ah, but real geeks use base 1009 (for their mathematical needs and

      2k = 2 * 1009 + 20 = 2018 + 20 = 2038

      ~Phillip

    4. Re:Your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2*(2^10) = Y2k

    5. Re:Your sig by Xtifr · · Score: 1

      "2*(2^10)"

      Or as it's known in less silly parts of the world: 2^11. :)

    6. Re:Your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      overflow 32 bit integers
      Note, that's signed 32 bit integers:
      signed:
      1970 + (2^31 / 365.25 / 24 / 60 / 60)
      2038

      unsigned:
      1970 + (2^32 / 365.25 / 24 / 60 / 60)
      2106

      So if we unsigned time_t on 32 bit unices we'd have another 68 years in which to switch to architectures that can handle 64 bit integers without a performance penalty.
    7. Re:Your sig by ggeens · · Score: 1

      I still remember the Y2K transition. We started on Monday, and everything was ready by Fridak. And the next week we did the months.

      Then we started to suspect that something might go wrong in 00...

      --
      WWTTD?
    8. Re:Your sig by cje · · Score: 2

      So if we unsigned time_t on 32 bit unices we'd have another 68 years in which to switch to architectures that can handle 64 bit integers without a performance penalty.

      That would break any code that relies on being able to store negative values in an object of type time_t. This is common in instances (for example) when you're calculating the difference between two times. Now, you might (successfully) argue that code like that is broken anyway since the C standard does not specify the interpretation and/or granularity of time_t, and therefore does not guarantee that mathematical operations on objects of said type will yield any useful or portable results. Really, all you can do with time_t object(s) is pass them to functions like mktime() or difftime().

      However, this ignores the fact that there is, for better or worse (mostly worse) a lot of code out there that will break if such a solution is applied. It's not a big deal, really; anybody who is still using a 32-bit UNIX OS in 2038 is going to deserve what they get. :-)

      --
      We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
    9. Re:Your sig by scribblej · · Score: 1

      Prolly pointed out already, but he clearly meant

      Y 2K - Note the K

      A K is 1024 bytes, right?

      2K = 2048.

      Y2K = 2048. Nothing to do witht he time overflow in 2038.

      -Chris

    10. Re:Your sig by red_flea · · Score: 1
      IIRC, the numbers go from 0 to one less than the base you're in, i.e. 0-1 for base 2, 0-9 for base 10 and 0-1008 for base 1009. However, for us to properly represent such a base, we'll need 1009 different symbols to represent the range of values for a single digit. Assuming we have that, here are some conversions.


      From base 10 to base 1009:
      2000 = 1x where x is the digit for 991
      2038 = 2y where y is the digit for 20


      From base 1009 to base 10 (assuming the digits 0-9 are the lowest 10 of the 1009):
      2000 = 2(1009^3) = some really big number I'm too lazy to calculate
      2038 = 2(1009^3) + 3(1009) + 8 = an even bigger number


      There's no amazing coincedence here, nothing funny about how numbers happen to be the same in different bases. In fact, if I'm not mistaken, there is no combination of integer bases for which 2000 in one is 2038 in the other. As for nonintegral bases, I don't think they exist, and I don't have the imagination to think of how their digits would work...


      We, the jobless, have nothing better to do than write programs to prove slashdot posters wrong. Resumes, you say? Instead of sending them, I could shred them and get nearly the same response from HR people: nothing. Except now I have a shredded resume to dispose of. Yes, that is bitterness you're sensing...

  35. Re:Sir Bard by bakes · · Score: 2

    (from dictionary.com)

    irony Pronunciation Key (r-n, r-)
    n. pl. ironies

    1.
    1. The use of words to express something different from and often opposite to their literal meaning.
    2. An expression or utterance marked by a deliberate contrast between apparent and intended meaning.
    3. A literary style employing such contrasts for humorous or rhetorical effect. See Synonyms at wit1.
    2.
    1. Incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs: "Hyde noted the irony of Ireland's copying the nation she most hated" (Richard Kain).
    2. An occurrence, result, or circumstance notable for such incongruity. See Usage Note at ironic.
    3. Dramatic irony.
    4. Socratic irony.

    --
    Ho! Haha! Guard! Turn! Parry! Dodge! Spin! Ha! Thrust!
  36. Pseudo Adult Market? by ShadowFlyP · · Score: 1

    I guess the author is implying that these older gamers have matured physically, but not mentally since they are still playing "kid games"?

  37. C64, CoCo II, Apple IIe, 8086? What was your's? by saskboy · · Score: 1

    I have all 4 of these systems now, and the Apple is still my favourite, with the Color Computer a close second. The games for Apple, despite being on disk were easy to load, some were slightly educational, and almost all of them kicked butt. The Commodore 64 was good, but I didn't get one until the mid 90s, and it was sooooo slow loading any game from disk.
    I got a CoCo II for Christmas around 1985, and nearly played it into the ground. About the last game I bought for it was Tetris in the early 1990s.

    The 8086 with CGA was the start of a new trend in computer based games. No more floppies/cartridges needed, and a much wider variety of nearly free games. Sopwith for instance is an absolute joy to play, but my copy doesn't seem to work with a competitor over serial connection anymore :-(. The graphics may be crude, but the memories are still there, and so are the motor-memories for winning.

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  38. Large Potion of Computer Gamers by GoogolPlexPlex · · Score: 5, Funny

    When potion is consumed, 12 hit-dice of computer gamers are summoned in the area surrounding the consumer. Half of the summoned computer gamers will attack the enemies of the party of the consumer, half will form an opposing team and attack the other half (and the party itself). They will remain for 6 turns, until unsummoned, or until the supply of Mountain Dew runs out, whichever occurs first.

  39. 30 and over game servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how long it will be before you can join a 30 and over game server. Better yet, 20 something and over server would do. It would be nice to play with some polite people for a change.

    1. Re:30 and over game servers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'm 31. fuck you.

  40. Age deciding what consoles are popular? by FuzzzyLogik · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe the age thing has to do with the fact that Nintendo used to be the most popular game system on the planet, when we were younger Mario was great, now that most have grown up, maybe they're into the more advanced type of games, or atleast the more mature games and that's why the PS2 is selling like crazy. Then again, Nintendo is selling the gamecube like hot cakes as well. I just can't get enough mario myself, as childish as it may seem, it's always a joy to play a new mario game, they're always insightful and intriguing on a more technical angle, especially the switch to 3d, that was amazing. and the newest is nothign short of amazing as well.

    Logik

  41. Surprising (Or Doubtful) by Metallic+Matty · · Score: 1

    I find it surprising (or doubtful, if you wish to be a cynic) that most gamers are over 35. I am only 17, but I've been playing online games for a few years now, and console games since before I can remember (NES is the shit!) And when I think about it, there are MASSES of kids who own various consoles (and often, several consoles) and PC's with games... And sure, I know lots of older people play games too, I'm sure when I'm all grown up and have a job I'll keep up my geeky habits, but I'd think that as you got older, many people would stop playing games...

    PS: My graphing calculator is not just a handy tool; its also loaded with my favorite NES games for when calculus and physics become a tad tedious ;)

  42. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  43. old gamers? by taernim · · Score: 1

    Is this related to the previous story about the Korean guy dying from "too much gaming"? We younguns can take it... but they can't? ;)

    --
    "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
    1. Re:old gamers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guy didn't get out of the friggin' chair for 86 hours. You're supposed to take a nice piss every 6 hours to flush out the poisons (and usually a nice crap every 12 hours). Remember, the guy was found dead in the john.

  44. Been gaming since I was 10 by Flounder · · Score: 2
    I'm 32 now. Between my dad's Apple][ and the Atari 2600 and arcades, I've spent (wasted) approx 7 years total time playing a game of some sort.

    Fast forward to 2002. I'm now 32, still playing games, and now I can afford the hardware needed for most current games. GTA3 is my current obsession (and I know I'm not the only one).

    I actually had a kid working at Best Buy ask me if I was buying a game for their kid when I was perusing the game aisle. I've been gaming since he was still a dribble in his mom.

    Can't wait till my kids are old enough to play the hardcore stuff. Until then, it's GT3 on the PS2.

    --

    No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

    1. Re:Been gaming since I was 10 by Icefyre · · Score: 0

      I actually had a kid working at Best Buy ask me if I was buying a game for their kid when I was perusing the game aisle. I've been gaming since he was still a dribble in his mom. You think you've got it bad... Whenever I buy games the guys in EB ask if they're for my boyfriend =P

      --
      "I'm not a vegetarian because I love animals. I'm a vegetarian because I hate plants."
  45. Re:I would have to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Man, i agree with the other guy, it seems like the people at /. not only are negative when it has come to moderation lately, but there are people out there that will argue with anybody! I mean, what is the point? Why can't people just say something positive and contribute to a discussion INSTEAD bashing someone elses comments? I tell ya, trolls: they are everwhere....

  46. Gah! by EvilStein · · Score: 4, Funny

    Some of them are still playing the same Nethack game they started in 79!

    The rest are probably wandering through the Zork anthology over and over and over..... hell, I've been lost in the Zork II maze since 1989.

  47. damn this... by Lord+Prox · · Score: 1

    As an anti-social gamer and older-than-the-average I used to think that I was a reject or something was wrong with me. but I managed to convince my self that I was just different. Since I don't like most people anyway, I began to revel in my odd-socialy-malligned bahavior. And I was happy And then come this post saying I am not different, that I belong to an entire group of like minded, socialy-malligned older-than-average gamers. Now I am back to where I started. Not really different. Just socialy-malligned. I need a support group or something.

  48. Evolution of the gamer? by phorm · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. One moment mom, I just have to save my game!
    2. I'll be there soon honey, I'm almost done
    3. Damnit Martha where are my spectacles? I can't see the crosshairs and I'm 4 frags behind.

    If I can find a game that's not a repeat-concept when I'm 40 I'll be very happy - phorm

  49. Old Farts Rule! by Dead_Smiley · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I belong to a gaming clan. We just play for fun because most of us are older and don't have the time it takes to develope the skills.

    Our tag is =VIO= which stands for Victory Is Ours.

    The running joke for people who ask is that it stands for Viagra Is on Sale.

    You can visit us on: irc.Renegade-IRC.Net #vio

    --
    I know what the Internet is, what the hell is this Interweb business?!
  50. The Pain Station by sheepab · · Score: 2

    Have all those 35+ gamers start playing on the pain station, Im sure they'll quit gaming real fast, and the younger demographic will take over again :)

  51. Imagine the old folks home in a few years... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    People won't be complaining about the food, they'll be saying "This internet connection isn't any good"

    I remember when Quake 3 was all the rage.

  52. I'm a bit older than you and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nothing like sniping pedestrians (especially the queers) and beating people with baseball bats and taking their money. I especially liked the one dude who told me "my car is better than yours". Damn, he was right, so I got out of mine, dragged his ass out of his, beat his ass with the bat for good measure, and took his car. Don't even get me started on the epic rampages I've gone on in the tank. And how could I not mention how cool the cinematic shot of my ramping a bus over the bridge on the second island was. Ahh, how I would like to be my thugish guy with his thugish disposition and phrenology inspired good thugish looks! What a life it would be to be him in Liberty City.

  53. Wait'll the nurses... by mtec · · Score: 5, Funny

    in our old folks homes get a loada the way we can press that call button!

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!
    1. Re:Wait'll the nurses... by Cybrex · · Score: 1

      Oh, sorry. We're all out of cake.

      --
      Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic Optimism, Intelligent Technology, Spontaneous Order- BEST DO IT SO!
    2. Re:Wait'll the nurses... by ktakki · · Score: 4, Funny

      Up down up down left right left right start select = unlimited nurses.

      k.

      --
      "In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
    3. Re:Wait'll the nurses... by Ozymandias_KoK · · Score: 1

      Right. I'll have the chicken, then.

    4. Re:Wait'll the nurses... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was up up down down left right left right B A Start. Not like the "Konami Code" works with their newer games these days, anyway...

  54. I would have to say..."Pooey, from me to you!" by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Mario? Geez, that's, like NEW!

    I started playing games on a model 33 Teletype. Then we got an OSI 540 board going and I played Tiger Tank 'til the wee hours. And Wumpus and all matter of things, before discovering $DUNGEO (many refer to this as Zork) and $ADVENT (Colossal Cave), both brought back on a tape from a DECUS. Then there were many others written by students, before the first Apple Lab opened on campus and color was introduced. Eventually arcades sprung up at the mall, where Mario lept over barrels to rescue a princess.

    Aging gamers? Well, there's aging games, too, which many call AbandonWare (and many a site dedicated to the nobel cause of keeping these things alive, while EA keeps recreating the same themes over and over...)

    It's really a question of what a generation does with its leisure time. Mine spent it gaming. The current one does, too. It's rather hard to imagine future generations not doing it (unless everyone suddenly falls for some absurd cult.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:I would have to say..."Pooey, from me to you!" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wumpus? Oh yeah! TI-99, baby! Wumpus, Parsec and Munch Man, all the way...

    2. Re:I would have to say..."Pooey, from me to you!" by cats · · Score: 1

      Mario leapt over barrels to save his girlfriend Paulina, not a princess. Donkey Kong had Mario saving Paulina from a rather large and unruly ape knwon as Donkey Kong.

      Just a piece of Nintendo trivia.

    3. Re:I would have to say..."Pooey, from me to you!" by AndrewCox · · Score: 1

      And if you want to get that pedantic, it wasn't technically "Mario" at all when Donkey Kong came out - he was just called "Jumpman".

      --
      The Red Pill ... all I'm o
    4. Re:I would have to say..."Pooey, from me to you!" by cmdrwhitewolf · · Score: 1

      Boy, do I remember playing MU-Dungeon on the Mecc Teletype! I even remember trying to input my first basic text game via the card reader. (Yep, you read that right, I did say 'card reader' - the yucky pencil fill in or punch hole card programming days of yore. When You only had a few K and Meg was a complete pipe dream!)

      Believe me, I'm a aging 37 year old casual gamer who misses the days of 'classic games'. (Thanks for the Abandonware tip, BTW!) And I think now a days what the media calls gamers, isn't. Especially ever since Magic the gathering collectible Card games fouled the paper & pencil Role Playing Games, (or worse, when Vegas started renaming Gambling to 'gaming'...).

      IMHO, a 'gamer' is part strategist, part problem solver, and part curious kender willing to dig into really thick rulebooks in order to play - not these neophyte wimps coming along who have trouble memorizing a set of game rules which have been reduced to the size of a sixteen page pamphlet!

      So if their using that benchmark for measuring the gamer population, then their statistic is more plausible!

      - White Wolf

      --
      [Now, I'm off to lift my le... Um, visit... at another place.]
  55. in other news by RestiffBard · · Score: 4, Funny

    a surprising number of drivers can be found in all age ranges. not surprising since cars have been around for almost a hundred years.

    --
    - /* dead coders leave no comments */
  56. Statistics? by lpret · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder if there have been any studies into the age of gamers (console and PC and any difference there may be). I also wonder if it is a bell curve-shaped age distribution -- meaning, if the average gamer is over 35, does that mean there are just as many gamers older than 35 than younger than 35? Or does it mean that the mean is somewhere between 25-30 and where is the mode(s)? I mean, it could be inverted, with emphasis on the 10-14 yr. olds, and another emphasis on 30-35 yr. olds. Anyways, just doing my statistics hw and trying to find some usefulness for it...

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
  57. whoops - shoulda tucked that under the one below.. by mtec · · Score: 1

    sorry...

    --
    Cake or Death? Cake Please!
  58. And in other news by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Funny

    the surprising statistic that a large potion of computer gamers are over 35.

    Interesstingly, a large portion of humans are over 35.

  59. A previous study... by lpret · · Score: 2, Informative

    Here is a previous study that is much more interesting and factual, Alice in the Matrix. It's an interesting read with 330 responses that seems to affirm what the article had to say.

    --
    This is my digital signature. 10011011001
  60. Correlation by taloobie · · Score: 2, Funny

    Could there be a correlation between high average gaming age and the Generation X financial problems refered to in an earlier topic today????

    There is for me. I got a bunch of .com jobs so I could support my addiction to gaming well into my 50s!

  61. First Loss-of-Memory post! by mangu · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    No one, as far as I can remember, has posted a comment on how older gamers have trouble remembering things.

  62. Yes, I am the aging gamer by The+Diver · · Score: 1

    but gaming is much different for me today.... I grew up in the arcades playing such games as Asteroids, Galaga and Defender. I went through years keeping up with the hardware so I could play games like Half-Life. But...I still play Doom II the most. Why? As a 38 year old father of 2 boys, I don't have time to practice enough to get good at the games today. All I want to do is sit down for about 10 minutes and blow shit up. I haven't bought a game for the PC since Half-Life was first released.

    1. Re:Yes, I am the aging gamer by artrr · · Score: 1

      Man im laughing at this one!
      I was thinking it was cool to show my 2 boys
      that i could navigate Spiderman and do a nasty
      on those thugs that keep poppin up along the way....

      Then, about 2 weeks later, my eldest of the two shows me how to defeat the opponents in 4 new ways
      "Hey check this out dad!" jzeessh? It wasnt too long ago i would look and find just about every switch there was to and/or?

      Just the same i dont mind "previewing them for the real users"

      "thanks dad!"

  63. The Wolfenstein Generation by Beebos · · Score: 1

    Just prior to coming over to/., I was playing Return to Castle Wolfenstein. Upon reading this article I thought back to my first true gaming love Castle Wolfentstein on th Apple II.

    Hi, my name is Beebos.......

    -----Hi Beebos. ..... and I have a problem....

  64. Re:C64, CoCo II, Apple IIe, 8086? What was your's? by ZzzzSleep · · Score: 1
    The Commodore 64 was good, but I didn't get one until the mid 90s, and it was sooooo slow loading any game from disk.
    Yes, the C64 disk games were slow. The games that came on a cassette were MUCH slower though... Were there many C64 games released on cartridges? Mmmmmm.... plug it in, turn it on, instant gaming....
  65. Vectrex, 1982 by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 2

    Vectrex, 1982. Do the math. Sigh.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  66. Run Logan, run! by kfg · · Score: 4, Informative

    Gee, who woulda thunk that *old* people might like playing games? It's unseemly I tell you. Next thing you know 35 year olds will expect to be *real* racing drivers, mercenaries, adventurers, golfers, fighter pilots and, ummmm. . . Tertroids.

    We have to put a stop to this. Kill 'em. Kill 'em at 30. Kill 'em all!

    Here's another hot newsflash from the blindingly obvious findings desk, your parents still " do it." Not only that, they "do it" more often, and *better,* than you do.

    KFG

  67. New gamers Market? by Dankling · · Score: 0

    Since most of the gamers are growing old and getting gray hairs, what does this mean for us young game players? After the old people become too old who will play DAoC, NWN, or Shadowbane with me? Do you think that a new wave of younger geeks will take over?

    --
    Slash-for-Thought
  68. Re:I would have to say... by cbreaker · · Score: 1

    I thought this was a discussion board. Hmm. I guess discussion is ONLY valid if you all agree?

    That's no fun.

    --
    - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
  69. Who's old? by r_j_prahad · · Score: 3, Interesting

    With apologies to Alfred E. Newman...

    What, me old?

    By the way, I have a copy of Crowther and Woods' original Adventure on paper tape for the PDP-11/55, and I have got the Zork Trilogy on my Linux box.

    1. Re:Who's old? by Warshadow · · Score: 1

      Me too, but I'm only 23 ;P

      Of course it helps that Adventure for the PDP-11 is my father's, but hey I had many a fun night as a kid playing Zork I,II and III and Colossal Cave.

  70. Take him camping. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hunting is good. It'll help his CounterStrike game. I can see it now: father and son bunny-hopping through the woods with AWPs.

  71. Quasi-interesting by danish · · Score: 5, Funny

    An open letter to the editors of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle:

    Your articles are only quasi-interesting. Semi-interesting. You're the margarine of interesting. You're the Slashdot of interesting -- only one calorie, not interesting enough!

    Thank you.

  72. Copying games from books with computer programs by spineboy · · Score: 2

    I remember My first computer Apple II in 1980. There weren't ANY games you could buy. But, however, there were BOOKS with games and programs with the code printed in BASIC. You had to copy the program out of the book and then save it to a crappy radioshack tape player.. Remember listening to the start of a program...BRAAAA....BRAAAABOOOSCCRRRR!
    I also remember some of the code used "A" in IF THEN statements and the computers generating errors from that ERROR line 10 IF AT HEN goto line 100

    But I could write my own "game" in an afternoon.

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
  73. Computer Games Got Me Started Programming by dochood · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I started playing computer games at age 14 in 1980, on a TRS-80, then an Apple II. I started playing a fair bit (growing up in a town of 350 folks there isn't a lot to do, anyway), when my science teacher noticed something in me. He said, "You know, I'm not going to let you play on that thing anymore unless you learn to program it!" I asked, how am I going to do that? He responded by throwing the programming manual in my lap and said, "Here. Ask if you have any questions."

    That got me started down the path to my current career! I played a lot of games in HS, but I also wrote my own text based adventure game on an Apple II, and I even wrote a little "Star Wars" game on a Vic 20 that I borrowed from a neighbor kid over Christmas Break!

    I'm now a Software Engineer for a Government Contractor firm, working in some cool technologies. I still play games today (having moved up from Apple Panic and Castle Wolfenstein 1 to Serious Sam II), but I don't play as much as I used to, having a wife and two kids. I do let my kids play a little more than I probably should, but I'm hoping that the love of computers might get them interested in programming, too! Since we homeschool, I personally think they'd have a GREAT computer programming teacher!

    P.S. Thanks, Mr. B! (science teacher) Without you, I might still be a gamer, but I probably never would have become a programmer!

    1. Re:Computer Games Got Me Started Programming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yess... gamers are indeed a lower form of life...

      *evil grin*

      I used to be a gamer, once upon a time. Now I spend that time programming or doing things I consider more useful. I rarely play any now... maybe I'll snap some day. After all, all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...

      (blatant Shining reference)

  74. Re:I would have to say... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

    "I thought this was a discussion board. Hmm. I guess discussion is ONLY valid if you all agree?"

    Understanding is a requirment for discussion. He did not say 'everybody has to agree', he said 'contribute'. That means "say something meaningful", not "express your opinion that everything you don't like sucks."

  75. Future Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gamer Dies After 86 Years of Gaming

    Posted by Anonymous Coward Thursday, October 10, 2053 @ 9:55 PM

    from the slashdot-is-still-around dept.

    A 94 year old man died after being a gamer for 86 years. Authorities said this was really a non-incident, since 94 is a natural age to die at. Friends and family remember how he started gaming in the 70's. Quoting witnesses, coroner's said that the man regularly got up from his computer and ate meals and slept. He died peacefully in his sleep.

  76. 30plus Clan by bpd1069 · · Score: 1

    I'll take this time to plug a gaming clan that I have been in since 9/9/99... Always thought that was a cool day in history...

    www.30plus.org

    Anyway, just a bunch of guys (and some girls) over the age of 30 that like to play online games from Q3F to well, there are other ones but for the life of me I couldn't tell you what they are!

    The one observation I can share is that since the early days of Quake Clans, many have come and gone but the ranks of 30plus keeps growing. I guess this is all in agreement with the trend and the unbreakable laws of nature... Young Gamer + Time = Older Gamer.

    Do The Math(tm) -- Atari Corp 1995

    --
    --
  77. Diet Coke of Interesting! by zaqattack911 · · Score: 1

    read subject.

    Laugh.

    Rinse.

    Repeat.

    --Me

    1. Re:Diet Coke of Interesting! by TomServo · · Score: 1

      Profit!!!

      I got nothing...

  78. math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    possibly mentioned above, but too lazy to read through it all....

    let's see now:

    1970 + 35 = 2005

    hmmmm....

  79. Re:I would have to say... by cbreaker · · Score: 1

    Agreed that you should "contribute", but I think everyone has gotten a little too touchy when someone disagrees with them and they immediately shout "Stop Flaming!! TROLL!"

    I don't agree that 'contribute' necessarily means "say something meaningful" however; only the very off-topic and unrelated things are which I consider meaningless. I am always interested in what people have to say, be it full of all sorts of meaning or a fluffy comment.

    As far as understanding; it's really impossible to know if someone understands the discussion from a short paragraph or two from them. It seems as though you are *assuming* that some people don't understand when they type out something that you consider meaningless.

    Of course, this is very off-topic thus a meaningless contribution to the discussion, so ignore all of the above.

    --
    - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
  80. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  81. It's a matter of perception by Cybrex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can only speak from anecdotal evidence, but if you drop the number down a few years (say 30 or so) then this is completely in line with my experience.

    I'm 32. I played my first video game when I was around 5 (Pong) and have been a hard core gamer since 1979 when I got my Atari 2600. My enthusiasm for video games (both old and new) hasn't wavered a bit since then. With the possible exception of sex, video games are my absolute favorite activity. (From a romantic relationship standpoint this isn't really a problem, since it's balanced out by my total lack of interest in sports, but I digress.)

    Most of my peer group (friends and coworkers) is the same way, and we all game regularly, both alone (on PCs and consoles) and networked (LAN parties and over the `Net). I don't think I know a single person who ever "grew out of" video games.

    I think that the difference in our perception is based on how we game. When we (my friends and I) deathmatch it's usually on a private server that one of us has set up. Rarely do we play on public servers, as the performance tends to be poorer and the players tend to be more obnoxious (not all of them, obviously, but the dickhead ratio is definitely higher on open games).

    It could simply be that younger gamers are less likely to have access to a restricted dedicated server, and hence more likely to play together on open servers. Older gamers tend to have more disposable income and are less likely to have to justify the cost of a dedicated server to someone, as well as more opportunity to lug their machines over to a LAN party.

    Just my $.02

    -Cybrex

    P.S.- My Titanium PowerBook is not just a handy tool; it's also loaded with every Atari 2600 game ever made and 4.5 GB of MAME ROMs. ;)

    --
    Boundless Expansion, Self-Transformation, Dynamic Optimism, Intelligent Technology, Spontaneous Order- BEST DO IT SO!
    1. Re:It's a matter of perception by thunderbee · · Score: 1

      You just summed up about everyting I might have wanted to write, to the point where we run our own UT server ;-)
      Just because I haven't read that already, I'll add that I remeber "T-Rex" on the ZX-81 (Timex sinclair in the US). And my thinkpad is loaded with Apple // MAME image disks ;-)

      --
      In my opinion, Scientology is a cult you should avoid.
  82. WARNING: Argument sketch conjured by billd · · Score: 5, Funny
    Is this the right room for an argument?

    I told you once

    No you didn't

    Yes I did

    When

    Just now

    No you didn't.

    Look if I argure, I must take up a contrary positionI

    yes but that isn't just saying "no it isn't"

    yes it is

    no it isn't

    --

    -----

    For great justice!

    1. Re:WARNING: Argument sketch conjured by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How long haven't you been contradicting people?

  83. This is significant by Myco · · Score: 2

    I'm not really surprised by this, given that gamers get older like everyone else but gaming doesn't get much less addictive (you just have less time for it). But it's important that the fact of there being a significant demographic of older gamers is acknowledged, especially by game developers. Older gamers tend to have different tastes, and the more developers realize what their audience is like the greater the chance they'll make games we'll enjoy even more.

  84. Yah i use my computer for work but secretly.... by artrr · · Score: 1

    Im a pcgame speedfreak addict....

    But considering the p-4 can be overclocked,
    its not (yet), the 333ram upgraded to 400 its not
    (yet) the GForce 2 Ti auctioned for a GForce 4 or maybe the new ATI card its not (yet)

    But give me another fistful of bucks (ok in Canadian that would be two fistfuls) id probably forsake that next cool trip for the speediest game machine on the block ... oh yah did i mention im 40 now (ouch)

    Cant wait for the new Tron to be released...pant pant (now thats really telling isnt it?)

    art

  85. Still playing older games by tbuskey · · Score: 1

    In high school I played Wizardry I and didn't go on to solve it. After college (Clarkson, right near Sir-Tek's HQ), I found Wizardry V for the PC. I found version 1-3 for the PC too. A few years later, Wizardry 7.

    Now, I've got Wizardry Archives. All for DOS 1-7. Lots of walk throughs, maps, cheats, etc. Cool.

    I've played with the Apple ][ emulators and the apple versions. Now, I run the archive versions under DOSemu.

    btw - Anyone got an RPM for a Linux Apple ][ emulator? I'd rather that then run ApplePC under DOSemu. Yep, it's faster & more machine then my old Apple ][+. Too bad I forgot most of the commands for the apple :-(

  86. Gaming ain't what it used to be... by coupland · · Score: 3, Funny

    Back in my day gamers were all young and we had to use our imaginations! Screens only had four pixels and the only colour we had was black. Then some upstart invented amber and it's been all downhill since then...

  87. Re:I would have to say... by Raiford · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You don't even have to disagree. You can get a Flamebait, Troll for just suggesting that Windows does just one thing better than Linux

    Raiford -- Hacking Linux since 1993

    --
    "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
  88. Korean's need to build up some stamina by core_blimey · · Score: 2, Funny
    This actually makes sense, since many of them began gaming in the 70's.


    My god! They started playing in the 70's and are still going strong? Makes that Korean chap seem a tad weak that he can't even handle a full week of gaming doesn't it.

    --
    In democracy your vote counts. In feudalism your count votes.
  89. Older Gamers are Better Gamers by ArmedGeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Myself and my roommate spend a significant amount of time playing Operation Flashpoint online and I gotta say : Me at 30 and my roommate at 27 are sometimes the youngsters.

    Also, more often than not, the older gamers are much more fun simply due to maturity. It's always more enjoyable to play with someone who understands concepts like: strategy, tactics, and TEAMWORK.

    --
    Work is punishment for failing to procrastinate effectively.
    1. Re:Older Gamers are Better Gamers by NeuroManson · · Score: 2

      And older gamers are about 90% less likely to message "ROFL U R GAY" to everyone in the game the moment they get a frag. The benefits speak for themselves.

      --
      Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  90. I've Always Wanted to Make a Web Site... by Spencerian · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...just for the older gamer, like me.

    I'm 38, and I still enjoy most kinds of games. Least amused by D&D style games like Neverwinter Nights (great title, though). I still rock with FPS and easily kick the ass of most people my age. Been playing a long time, since the 70's and Mattel's handheld football, the Ataris, and even DEC terminals with Camel and Trek.

    Passing time with Diablo II still, getting into some Sims, been really fragging the shit out of some young-ums in Quake 3, and looking forward to showing young meat how to catch a lightsaber when Jedi Knight II comes out for Mac OS X in a couple of weeks.

    Yep, card carrying, Excellent Fragging Member of The Old Gamers Club: Where you are never too young to get your ass kicked.

    I sincerely plan to be old but still able to hang and beat my grandchildren at whatever marvels show up in the future. I was around during the dawn of the electronic gaming age, and my "Tron finger" is as snappy as ever.

    --
    Vos teneo officium eram periculosus ut vos recipero is.
  91. Simple economics. by jinx90277 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It isn't any great mystery -- it's simple economics, plus demographics.

    Kids (say, up through early college) would like to play games, but don't have the disposable income.

    Younger adults (say, late college through late 20s) have disposable income, but they are spending their money on social pursuits, vacations, cars, gadgets, clothing, etc.

    But when they finally marry and start families, the center for entertainment switches to the home...and those $50 games are somewhat more affordable once you hold down a real job.

    --
    "she says i'm lousy conversation. as if that's supposed to help."
  92. Playing computer games since mid 70s by cbdavis · · Score: 1

    My first computer game was "colossal cave" in mid
    70s. Written in FORTRAN, it was first adventure
    game ( xyzzy to all!). Ran on an a IBM mainframe.
    We had source and modified it for tons of fun!

    Along with pinball, it was Apple II. Sinclair
    computer. IBM PC. Atari 800 ( my favorite).

    Tons of games since then. I'm 55 and all of this
    hasn't warp me too much. Except sometimes I hear
    "you are in a maze of twisty passages" in my
    sleep. Plover for ever!!!!

    1. Re:Playing computer games since mid 70s by cruachan · · Score: 1

      I think it originally ran on a PDP-11 or earlier model and was ported.

      I'm only in my early 40's but I remember playing games on a cyber on a school trip to the local polytechnic (a sort of english university) in 1977. Same trip they had someone demonstrate something like a mouse - a sliding positioning device on a large metre square table.

  93. Nah, they can't be _that_ old by thunderbee · · Score: 1

    I find it amusing that most goungsters here disbelieve the possibility that 30+ gamers exist, or even that there were videogames during the prehistoric times of their youth.

    Well, there were.

    Sorry to disapoint you, but all that has changed is better graphics, higher fps, and lousier storylines. Impressive graphics have made up for the lack of a story.

    You should also remember that many mainframes had games. I played games on a Control Data Cyber 175 (I think), which was a multi-million dollar computer. Ha. I guess most of you haven't even heard the name Control Data (CDC).

    About any computer I ever got my hands on had games. So, yes, there are 'old' gamers.
    [Rant]We just don't have 6+ hours a day to train on UT like you do, but we certainly do hold our own in FPS games, and more often that not will surprise the youngers in strategy games (real ones, like TA, not starcraft (FlameBait(TM))). And we have the means to operate game servers on premium hardware with real bandwith :)[/Rant]

    --
    In my opinion, Scientology is a cult you should avoid.
  94. I'm an old man by reformhead · · Score: 1

    At 37, I'm an old-time gamer.

    I remember the days of swapping in and out Ultima diskettes on my 8088 and even before that, playing Frogger on my C-64. Better yet, writing my own games on the Vic 20 and the C-64.

    God loves old gamers.

    D.

  95. wolfenstein! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like half the return to castle wolfenstein community in aus is over 30, the rest are over 20, except for the token 14 year old (some of whom are sons of the older ones :)
    these guys have surprising agility for old bastards :P

    1. Re:wolfenstein! by clarkc3 · · Score: 1

      i still play the old version more than return to castle wofenstien. I was pissed when they made rtcw so that all of the Germans decided to speak in English, I want to hear them scream something in German when I shoot them

  96. Re:nt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our Brother Who ART in /.

    I agree with your post. In fact it expresses ideas I've long thought only belonged to me. So it can't be "-1 troll"

    HOWEVER

    it has nothing to do with aging games, gamers or monty python skits; so it's OBVIOUSLY "-1 offtopic"

    IN THE NAME OF JESUS
    thank you.

  97. Quake 4 Oldies by vinlud · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The oldest gamer I know of is about 53, member of the clan Quake 4 Oldies. One of the requirements to join the clan is that you are at least 30 years old. They even have a skin with wheelchairs :)

    --
    Repeat after me: We are all individuals
  98. Re:I would have to say... by cbreaker · · Score: 1

    Aye, that is true. I love Linux, and hope it continues it's evolution. It's excellent for the server.

    Personally I think that I can do many things in Windows better then linux. But, like most people, it's the applications that make that true not really the OS.. so yea, for my main workstation Windows has its place because of the applications. (and games.)

    --
    - It's not the Macs I hate. It's Digg users. -
  99. Me.I did not. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    I found it profoundly boring. I was 15.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  100. Kewl! by NeuroManson · · Score: 2

    Does that mean we can finally sue the videogaming industry for stress related injuries such as carpal tunnel, nerve damage, and of course epileptic seizures?

    --
    Just because you can mod me down, doesn't mean you're right. Shoes for industry!
  101. Re:C64, CoCo II, Apple IIe, 8086? What was your's? by geekster · · Score: 1

    There were always that "fast forward a little bit once in a while" trick when you loaded from tape.

    I started out with an Atari 2600 then C64 then an Amiga 500 and finaly a PC (to play DOTT).

  102. Re:I would have to say... by mrleemrlee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think the percentage of gamers over 35 is probably rising all that much, because damn near every 10-year-old is a gamer, girls and boys. But the total number of over-35 gamers is certainly rising.

    I'm not 35, but I am 30, and I don't consider myself among the vanguard of gaming in the 1970s, though I did have an Atari before they started calling it the 2600 ... Heck, my mother used to play Atari with me back then, and she plays Shanghai and Bejeweled now like a crack fiend, and she's 66 ... is she one of these over-35 "gamers"?

  103. Old Gamers Never Die by I-Iillbilly · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hey, Im one of those thar age'n gammers. Im a grandpa at 47. I can still be found frag'n my way around CounterStrike. Always hav'n games around the house resulted in my too oldest kids to become computer science grads. One is launching his own game company soon. Any way its freak'n halarious when you take out these young'ns on CS and then taunt the sh*t out of'm.

  104. Aging? by grub · · Score: 3, Funny


    Heck, I'll be 37 in December but I don't consider myself "aging".
    When I have the inkling to buy SimAdultDiapers or SimLawnBowling at the software storethen I'll consider myself "aging".

    Until then, I'll still stomp your arse in UT 2003, lad!

    Harumph!

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  105. The marketers need to grow up� by onlyabill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It was a rather short article but it is still satisfying to see it in print. It also matches other statistics that I have seen published elsewhere, in both gaming magazines and at online sites.

    Makes much sense too. For example, I grew up playing pinball with my father, graduated to the first video games (pong, breakout, etc.), moved on to C64, Apple II and Atari games as they became available and now PC games with a big emphasis on the online worlds (that 1942 is not too shabby). I currently see myself playing games until I am too decrepit to move the controller (but hope by then the neural interface will be common place).

    The key point of surveys like this is that it shows the average gamer is not a pimple faced adolescent that is cutting school, sitting at home with no social life, spending all of (usually) his life lost in games. It is the middle class, working, husbands and wives looking for a little relaxation and escapism from their day. The sooner that the game industry (with their associated marketing departments) and the bulk of game magazines accept this idea and redirect their marketing to this group, the better. Most of the non-gaming public accepts the adolescent gamer myth because that is what they see from how games are marketed both directly and via the industry magazines. Hollywood plays a part in this too. I guess it is just too easy for the industry to throw more T&A into the marketing plan then to take the time to understand the market and sell accordingly.

    --
    I have to use this cause I can't afford a real sig...
  106. Ahl of my Children... by ackthpt · · Score: 1

    You might remember David Ahl, whom published books of basic games you could run on almost any computer. We typed IN Hunt the Wumpus, saved it to Cassette Tape, then played it.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Ahl of my Children... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Tape!?!??!?

      We had to save to paper tape! I think I still have my old Creative Computer and original Byte magazines in a box somewhere.

      I went from High school to working parttime at SWTPC - they had the first 6800 based home computer.

    2. Re:Ahl of my Children... by erpbridge · · Score: 2

      Do not, whatever you do, read the phrase "Hunt the Wumpus" while dead tired... I got a bad picture of "Hump the Wumpus" in my head for a moment...

      Oh, for the days of typing in BASIC games. I remember in Freshman year High School ('93), going to the school library, pulling a BASIC book off the shelf, then sitting at the never used C-64 and typing in a whole game over a week or two, then playing it. People would walk by and say "Cool, where'd you buy that game?" They could only play "Carmen Sandiego" on the 486/50's running Novell Netware.

      Then, 2 years later, I finally got my own computer, and realized just how pathetically behind the school's computer system was. I don't even want to go there now and see what they've got, for fear I'd end up laughing myself to death. ... I don't know which would be funnier... the ancientness of their systems, or playing "Hump the Wumpus"...

  107. Words of Wisdom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "One reason the gaming population is now older is simply that the gamers are aging, said Douglas Lowenstein, president of the IDSA."

    Wow, it takes a president to figure that out!

  108. "since many of them began gaming in the 70's." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or the 80s for god's sake. Give us the dignity of picking the correct decade for those of us just barely over 35. And then you'll understand why this isn't surprising given that the first "golden age" of gaming was circa 1983.

  109. Remember Pong? by leebrownusa · · Score: 1

    Pong was one of the first video games for home use I saw but could never afford. Times and games have changed and my son and I have been online gaming for years. Frag this! ;-)

  110. Not only people who played as kids by Skinny+Rav · · Score: 1

    Not only kids grew up but also as gaming becomes more and more mainstream adults who never played as kids now start to play.

    My father is 64, he plays Baldur's Gate, Majesty, Diablo II, Planescape: Torment. In Starcraft he is better than me. The first game he ever played was WarCraft. How old was he then? Something like 57 probably.

    And I have heard that many elderly people play Everquest for example. So, simply gaming became yet another entertaining activity like chess, fishing or watching TV

    Raf

  111. Love 'Em Too, but Kinda Miss Role-playing by Phoenix666 · · Score: 1

    For me and my friends it was pong thumb, and atari thumb. And I'm glad to know that a great many of them still game too, but I wish the same were true of role-playing as well.

    AD&D was far more entertaining and imaginative and...real than any video game ever was or has been. Friends of mine who played in campaigns with me still reminisce about the adventures as though they really happened and call each other by their old character names. But none of us would be caught dead playing now. The social approbation is too great. Even if you were to go to that place here in New York where people get together to play D&D and Magic, it would still feel like multitudes of people were standing outside shouting 'loser.'

    Sigh. If only MUDs could have taken their place, but it's not the same.

    --
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
  112. Atari sprite routines by easter1916 · · Score: 1

    Ah, the good old days... writing 6502 assembly language routines to do vertical sprite scrolling on an Atari 130XE, but having to write the assembler first in basic because that's how it was then -- roll your own.

    1. Re:Atari sprite routines by threadsafe_r · · Score: 1

      Huh? what are you going on about? you wrote your assembler compiler in basic... your SO full of S.

      http://www.6502.org/
    2. Re:Atari sprite routines by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I wrote an assembler in BASIC so that I wouldn't have to manually translate the operands and opcodes and do a bunch of POKEing... what is the problem? And why be so rude?

  113. Computer games = generation gap? by Da+VinMan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wonder if, when we're all senior citizens and fragging away on each other with Quake XXXVI, and taunting each other with broadband audio and vidio feeds, if the kids will pass us by and scoff. Maybe they would says things like "What's wrong with those old farts?! Why do they play that crap when they could just talk to each other?"

    Perhaps there *is* hope for our species after all.

    --
    Please mod this post only if you think others should/n't read this. I have enough ego^H^H^Hkarma. Thanks!
  114. Shoulda used Scheme by brlewis · · Score: 2

    The Scheme programming language has a built-in rationalize function to solve just this type of problem:

    (rationalize 924/1000 1/2000)

    Yields 61/66.

    Of course, 74.9% of all statistics are just made up on the spot anyhow.

  115. Re:C64, CoCo II, Apple IIe, 8086? What was your's? by barfarf · · Score: 1
    Tandy Radio Shack TRS-80 model II (1.77Mhz Z-80 running CP/M) w/16k ram and cassette drive! Played an entirely text-based Star Trek game written in Microsoft Basic where:

    (*) was a starbase

    -=+ was a Klingon ship

    and

    O-= was the enterprise

    We'd "warp" to go into battle with the Klingons and repair and refuel at the starbase. Sometimes the starbases would come under attack and we'd have to try to rescue it. The text based fonts looked more appropriate for the ships back then. Atari later released a more entertaining version of that same game later on called "Star Raiders"

    But man, we played that TRS-80 for HOURS at a time with my best friend when we were in second grade! Working at Radio Shack was our dream job back then (LOL) not to mention I would have absolutely died for a Heathkit computer.

    Then I migrated to an Atari 800 (my mom went apple IIe), then I went to an Atari ST (my mom went to macintosh), then I went PC.

    ... now I'm a network guy and I can finally AFFORD all of this stuff!!

  116. Re: Gaming for Tots by budalite · · Score: 2

    BTW: ToysRUs has a mouse for little kids. It's has yellow plastic ball on it about the size of a grapefruit and one button on the front. I used it to introduce my kids to games back when they were 4-5 years old. Worked great. Now my 11-year-old son wants me to install a house network. I am stalling on that (until wifi is safe) but I don't really relish the idea of getting my butt handed to me by my son. He's too good for me, already. Have fun with the kids.

  117. Hehehe... by nbvb · · Score: 2

    I'm 24, my dad's 51. He's a *much* bigger game addict than I ever will be.

    The poor guy spent SO much time playing Rush 2049 on his (yes, HIS, not mine) Dreamcast, he's found just about every single secret passageway through it ever.

    I grew up with pong & Intellivision in the house. We had the best tournaments... INTV Bowling, INTV baseball.... TO THIS DAY, whenever my Dad plays the baseball game, he has this little leg-kick thing every time it's a close play... almost like he's sliding into the base from the couch. Very funny stuff. :)

    What a blast we've had through the years ..... That's one of the few things I miss now that I live on my own... my girlfriend's wonderful and super and fantastic, but she's just not a gamer. :)

    Which, on the whole, isn't a bad thing. Gives me an excuse to Have a Life (tm).

    (Why, then, am I reading Slashdot on a Friday night? Oh, that's right. She's home, sick.)

    --NBVB

  118. when games were still FUN... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    let's see...

    omega race

    gyruss

    tempest

    zaxxon

    tapper

    river raid

    pitfall

    tron: deadly discs

    gorf

    river city ransom

    dodgeball

    double dragon

    *sigh*

    now we got all this 3d CRAP.. and that's all it is... it's not FUN.. now it's all eye-candy that tests your reflexes and scriptz haczoring.. BOOORING!!!

    and the one game i could sit and LITERALLY play until my face fell off because it moved me.. and probably wasted my brain cells and eyeballs...

    the ALL POWERFUL, more addictive than crack and boobies...

    the SIT down version of spy hunter.. i DARE you to pit another game against that shit...

  119. Re: Gaming for Tots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wired my house myself... wifi is too expensive/slow for my humble 7 node network (at least that's the story I'm sticking to). A purchase at Home Depot of fish tape and a spool of cat5e, a couple afternoons crawling through the attic, and voila! I'm cooking at 100MBPS, ready for 1G... mmmmm MORE SPEED!!

    My daughter is 3 and likes playing kid games like "Sesame Street", "Dragon Tales", and the Flash games on Nick Jr. site. Playing games on the computer is much more interactive and stimulating to the brain than watching TV (and leves them less susceptable to the Mighty Marketing Machine as Christmas draws near). I prefer she play these games on the computer over watching TV, any day.

    Of course, I can't get the image of billd hunting with his son out of my head...

  120. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    ... there are about 5,000 people who are part of that commitee. These guys
    have a hard time sorting out what day to meet, and whether to eat croissants
    or doughnuts for breakfast -- let alone how to define how all these complex
    layers that are going to be agreed upon.
    -- Craig Burton of Novell, Network World

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...