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Gaming As Image Statement

In an editorial entitled Will Anybody Care That You Liked Gaming Before It Was Cool?, GameGirlAdvance editor ClockworkGrue discusses aspects of PSP Glamour, and what it means when gaming devices become sex symbols. From the article: "It's great that gaming can be trendy, and that the 300 pound guy on the train the other day and Paris Hilton are both PSP owners. Maybe now there'll be some demand for game-related clothing that breaks the basement-casual standard?" Update: 04/15 11:13 GMT by Z : To fix broken link.

11 of 59 comments (clear)

  1. Old news by FidelCatsro · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gaming has always been somewhat cool , Since the days of the NES a "nintendo" has been a household name , They would get featured on TV programs and on anything else you could fit a famicon.The playstation ran with it and was the "Cool" system for the later part of the 90s, Sure 90% of the people had no clue what the hell a playstation was or what it did , but alot of people owned one and everyone knew the name , Playstation became synonymous wth Console.Later the rebranding to PSX notched it up another few cool factors , yet people still called it the playstation (or the nintendo).

    So now we have the PSP and the DS , tell you what the PSP is going to get called a gameboy by most people as will the DS .
    Im sorry but Paris hilton is not a sign of something being cool ...Can anyone tell me what the hell this woman has done(Being a rich slut does not make you cool) ....
    My point being The PSP and DS are cool for the very same reasons that the Playstation , Snes, megadrive(Genisis in the US) , NES and Gameboy were cool.
    They are the cultural icons for the games industry , they are the hoovers of the gaming world, People will walk up to you and ask "OOOH is that a *PSP* can i see".Nothing new here just the same old fashion sheek that has been on the edge of gaming since the NES

    --
    The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    1. Re:Old news by WaterBreath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There's an inherent difference between the days when NES was cool and now, when the PSP is cool.

      That difference is that the NES was cool on the playground, at school, among kids. Every kid wanted to have an NES. Whether they were in grade school, or high school, or college. But adults? They usually (special note: not always, but usually) bought them for their kids.

      The PSP is a phenomenon in that we who were kids when the NES was the "big thing", are now adults, mostly in or done with college. And we still want our video games. Only now we want them with us on the bus or the train, for our commute. Or in our laptop bag for our lunch break. Or in our carry-on bag on the plane for our business trip.

      That's the difference. That's the phenomenon.

  2. ...and? by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    so what? everyone who is young enough is a gamer now. every kid learns to play games nowadays.

    it's not 'cool', it's just something that everyone does..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  3. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    i think sony should sue. that's worse than libel or revealing trade secrets!

  4. I Hope Gaming Isn't an Image Statement by robbway · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let's compare to other image statements: hairstyles, clothing, and cars. All of those have a good run, sometimes up to 3 years, but when they're out, they're really out. It's called backlash. I'm afraid if the trendiness of games continues, game quality will diminish. Then the majority of development funds will be in PR bills to the point that when the blacklash hits, no company will touch games with a 10-foot pole. I liked it much better when everybody did it, and not because of some celebrity.

  5. Reality check by Nothing+Special · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gaming may be more and more an accepted thing to do by the populace, but I'm still gonna bet that the popular people and the outcasts aren't going to become blood brothers because they can both purchase a PSP. People are who they are and a piece of technology isn't going to make them be seen any different by the people around them. Nor will technological accessories. Sure, they may get more attention...but the attention is not about them, but about what they have with them...and when, invariably, the PSP grows stale, then so, most likely will interest in the person. Besides, people are still going to hang out with who they are comfortable with, their own friends, whether they be the sportos, the motorheads, geeks, sluts, bloods, waistoids, dweebies, dickheads - and they will be happy with that.

  6. Why Do We Hate The Activity We Love? by Chi+Hsuan+Men · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't understand why it is such a revelation that people play video games. Honestly, I don't think this is earth-shattering news. Growing up, my father was a heavy proponent of the "get your ass outside, play sports, and break a limb" philosophy. As a result I am a very athletic. I go to the gym regularly and I play basketball / softball in leagues. However, my father also enjoyed taking me to arcades. He too, liked picking up the occasional video game. We played Parsec and Blast-o on our Texas Instruments game console. As a result, I am involved in a gaming group and I play CS:Source and World of Warcraft. My father comes over my place frequently and we watch sports together. One day, I fired up the PS2 and showed him Madden 2005. He could not believe how far video games have progressed and what is capable now with the technology that is out there. He certainly wasn't any good at the game, but we had FUN playing the game together. ...isn't that what it's all about? Having fun? Why do gamers hate the activity they love? Why, in the article, did we feel the need to stereotype a gamer as the "300 lb. man sitting on the train". You know folks, there are gamers out there who are probably MORE attractive than Paris Hilton. ...oh yeah, I forgot, attractive female gamers are a myth. My bad. I understand there are people who sit in front of their computers and play EQ / WoW all day. Hell, I have a friend who is five years out of college, doesn't have a job, but has plenty of time to beat Ocarina of Time for the nth time. Why are these people (along with the 300lb. man) the community-appointed representatives of the hobby we adore?

    --
    Respect It.
  7. It's Official.... by CFTM · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I will not being buying a PSP. Not that I had planned to buy one of those things in the first place but to own something "trendy" that Paris Hilton owns *shudder* ... I really really really hope she OD's soon and stops wasting my oxygen.

    [Yes, that's a terrible thing to say. I know this but I stand behind my comments.]

  8. I'm sorry, but... by hollismb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gaming will probably never be 'cool' in the proper sense of the word. Accepted, yes, but 'cool', I don't think so. There's lots of things that are well known, talked about, and great sources of conversation that aren't cool, perse, but society doesn't really have a problem with them. Sure, I can go get my haircut, and the stylist might ask me if I've seen any good movies lately, but that doesn't exactly mean that if I walk in and start babbling about Sin City or the next Star Wars movie, that she's gonna think I'm still cool. There's things you can expound upon and still be cool and then there's things that simply aren't. I can tell you this, I'm not going to be having a conversation in some bar and mention to some girl that I'm pretty good at Halo 2, or tell her about the time I got a double-kill with a single shot from a sniper rifle. I'm sorry, but I don't see myself getting the digits after that one, if you know what I mean.

  9. Gaming image by frikazoyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is a natural thing to assume that a video game culture exists. Video games have been amazingly popular since the 80's, and have only grown in popularity since then. What companies haven't figured out is how to penetrate the market.

    Want to know why? Companies have no idea what the typical gamer is like. The stereotype has changed so much, it's impossible to get everyone and their dog to like exactly the same thing. Gamers are everything from sweaty perverted nerds (as seen in Dead or Alive 3 commercials), people desperate to be cool (as seen by this link), a bunch of lazy kids (as seen in any commercial you can think of where kid X doesn't want to do homework then suddenly pigs out on pizza product Y), and... well... you get the picture.

    What the corporate world doesn't realize is that everyone plays games. You can't get the attention of the 13-year-old sex depraved "gamer" without shunning a few "grrl gamers" and serious adults. Likewise, you're not going to get much love from the adult/retro crowd without sacrificing the interests of "Hal0-Xb0x-R0xx0rz3000" and his buddies in Junior High. Sony and Blockbuster and anybody else that can jump on the bandwagon are trying as hard as they can to fit the "gamer" peg into the square hole, but they don't realize that the "gamer" peg is only one of the pieces out there. And that is why there are so many loyalties and fanboys for every product you can imagine.

  10. About Paris Hilton.... by Brainboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Alright, I'm saying this only cause I've seen too many of the replies. I don't think the author meant the literal Paris Hilton, nor do i think it matters whether's she hot or not. To get across the point, the author is just using Paris Hilton as a symbol of Bimbo Average, or Super Popular Girl.

    And by the way, if you would stop doing something just because one or some popular people are doing it, such as buying a PSP, you're a Conformist Rebel who entertains thoughts of being an "individualist" while you're actually letting the popular people form what you are and do in the opposite way.

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    Just a guy with an opinion