FiftyDollarCurse wrote:Gaming is NOT mainstream yet, getting there though, gradually.
You know, now that I think about it, the last thing I want is for "video games" to become "mainstream". Because "mainstream", popular things are by and large, crap and no fun for a naturally contrarian and mercurial person such as myself.
And this is getting silly. Some video games are obviously mainstream. Wii Sports, Modern Warfare, Grand Theft Auto, Mario, Brain Age, these are all mainstream entertainment franchises [that a random sampling of people will probably be aware of, even they aren't intimately familiar]. Canabalt, Katamari Damacy and 3D Dot Game Heroes are not. This debate needs more focus and thought. Hrmmmm.
I know plenty of people who don't know anything about Call of Duty, GTA, Halo, Mario and Brain Age. No wait, scratch that, I think probably everyone knows who Mario is, but those other games aren't as well known as you might think. Keep in mind I'm not just talking about people in the age range of teens to thirty something and I'm not just talking about males, which pretty much are the target audience for games like that
Also, do you think the average person knows who ANYONE in the game industry is? You think names like Shigeru Miyamoto mean anything to the average person? Or Hideo Kojimo?or Itagaki, Cliffy B, Tim Schafer, Steve Wiebe, Peter Moore, etc. Now if you drop a name like Steve Speilberg, George Lucas, etc. The average person actually knows who the hell those people are. They know who writers like Anne Rice are, or Shakespeare, they know most of the big names in the music world, past, present and future. They know at least who a few tv celebs are. They know who Bill Gates is. The average person however, can't name one person of note in the video game industry. You know how many people can say they love Mario games and yet have never heard of Shigeru Miyamoto? And how many people there are who don't even know who the hell makes the Halo series and probably don't care
Gaming is not truly a big part of our culture yet.