Someone suggested an animal day anyway. We use pictures of our animals as avatars.
I have a dog, so it is easy to do.
Someone suggested an animal day anyway. We use pictures of our animals as avatars.
I have a dog, so it is easy to do.
I feel like that would just be more painful than fun for me, so I wouldn't participate.
I know it's poor form to comment on the appearance of a female GAFfer, but, my goodness.
Someone suggested an animal day anyway. We use pictures of our animals as avatars.
I have a dog, so it is easy to do.
I'd have to choose which animal to use.
This thread is getting way too creepy.
My hat is a dog, your argument is invalid.
All of you are on my hard drive. Some of you, multiple versions. Those who are not... will soon be.
Necessary steps are being taken to secure these into the tubes of the internet for the rest of time.
Expect it. Embrace it. Only good may come of this.
Yeah, that's probably around the time i'm not here. I do enjoy reading them the next day though.Oh no it's been creepy for quite some time now, I like mid day RP because we can usually get civilized conversation going.
Probably. Not enough of your kind for me to trouble myself with.Is it because I'm half asian, half hispanic?
Hey, hatters. What's up?
Oh. A loss of an animal maybe?
Probably. Not enough of your kind for me to trouble myself with.
lol, no really; what are your roots?
Yeah, my cat Rock died last year.
If I was participating in this, I would totally be rocking my Menchi hat.I rarely wear hats, so I totally forgot I had two other images laying around with me rocking a hat. It was either a choice between my current avatar, or
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and I chose my current avatar as I doubt GAF would accept Menchi-hat into their world.
If I was participating in this, I would totally be rocking my Menchi hat.
I realize this conversation is mostly over, but I wanted to point out that the hardcore/casual delineation is mostly segregationist to give people an inflated sense of superiority. My best stab at a reason is that these are likely people who were ostracized in life (made fun of for their hobby, weight, lack of social skills, etc.) that choose to do the same within their own special subculture because now they have the "advantage."
If I were to be selective in what I described as my most recent gaming sessions (say, only mentioning Mario Galaxy 2, Mario Kart 7, and some occasional Words with Friends), I might be labeled a casual gamer. But if I told you I played something like 400 games in 2011, regardless of quality or genre, people would say the opposite despite there effectively being no difference.
It's the gaming community's equivalent of "white trash," even though it's probably meant to be less insulting than that and more just generally demeaning.
Me said:Hardcore gamers are particularly interested in games that challenge their abilities but also allow them to succeed and improve. That is why games that have large multiplayer community can also be seen as 'hardcore' games, whereas games like Angry Birds, where there is a direct cap at how good you can get or the best score you can get, are considered casual.
Maybe.
Ah, nice. Wasn't really sure of anything anymore due to how much you were throwing me off.ha! I'm actually a mix. My father was Hungarian and my mother is Welsh.
But you're a fictional character so it wouldn't be the same.![]()
Your facial hair.... it has vanished.
All non-RP GAF avatars are ficitonal until proven RP.
Nah.... I think I have it more streamlined and optimized;
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I'm equally enticed for Shirtless Saturday. :}
So... Am I in that girlGAF Folder?
So... Am I in that girlGAF Folder?
So... Am I in that girlGAF Folder?
I agree. Let the court proceed!
You have now been moved to the '?' folder.![]()
I think having distinctions between different types of gamers is important to growing the community. Being able to say 'Casual Gamers (those who like X) are important members of the gaming community', we can be more inclusive of anyone and maybe even remove the last vestiges of negativity associated with the term 'Gamer'. Also because I like defining terms.
I still like my stab at definition earlier in the conversation.
"I'm in UR folderz. Surrounded by womenz"
If there is to be any Hat Tuesday artworks, I humbly suggest the slogan:
HATTERS GONNA HAT
I'm in ur collage, surronded by wiminz
![]()
But... but... that's just a bad pun.
I do wonder actually since being on these forums if puns are looked upon in the US with the same disdain as they are in the UK.
A comedian wouldn't say one seriously because it's just a bad pun. And even so it usually gets a groan from the audience.
So while we're still kind of on the topic of Gamers and their many distinctions... how about generally?
Does anyone still feel a strange stigma or unsettling feeling if you're either mentioned as, or say you are a gamer? I still dont feel its a social norm of the masses to be an accepted thing. Although I've embraced my gamerness and will wear shirts and such proudly professing my hobby, you cant help but still feel a bit of ostracizing that happens if you speak about it openly to non-gamers.
But... but... that's just a bad pun.
I do wonder actually since being on these forums if puns are looked upon in the US with the same disdain as they are in the UK.
A comedian wouldn't say one seriously because it's just a bad pun. And even so it usually gets a groan from the audience.
Exactly, it's the best kind. I LOVE puns because they are so bad most (all) of the time.
I think that particular pun is brilliant.
As far as this US citizen's outlook on puns... on a forum or in a conversation when thrown out there randomly, they can be hilarious. As a professional comedian, he'd better work on his game because it gets old very fast.
But... but... that's just a bad pun.
I do wonder actually since being on these forums if puns are looked upon in the US with the same disdain as they are in the UK.
A comedian wouldn't say one seriously because it's just a bad pun. And even so it usually gets a groan from the audience.
I agree that having distinctions help, but we ultimately use those distinctions to segregate ourselves from those we deem lower.
Maybe my perspective is just warped from posting on what is outwardly a "hardcore" gaming forum, but it seems like people don't use the casual/hardcore separation as a means to analyze audiences, rather, it's used to say "I don't like this/you/the games you are playing."
It's not a particularly new phenomenon, either. I remember the late 90s well, where some people were actually upset that Final Fantasy VII was bringing in people who weren't basement-dwelling, light-fearing moblins in to RPGs. I have my qualms with the impact of FFVII (that mostly come back to the way its presentational style affected the genre for the next ten years), but freaking out about how it expanded the audience seems positively silly right now.
And we went through the same thing in the 2000s with Halo 2. I think the words used then were "mainstream" and "closed-minded."
People who, when using modern standards and terminology, we would have once described as "casual" in 1997, are those we would gladly describe as just regular-ass GAFers today. Not to point fingers, but I know there are GAF mods who started playing games with FFVII, and that's totally fine. It just illustrates how the distinction as a means to demean is ultimately foolish. In fifteen years, the people GAF bitches about for buying Nintendogs could be the hardest of hardcore gamers by our current definition.
tl;dr I agree that the distinction aids things, people are just assholes that have twisted it in to meaning something that directly benefits their ego.
Puns are looked down on in the US.
I am not a comedian.
In all honesty, I think most of them suck, too, but they are a fun exercise for the brain.
So while we're still kind of on the topic of Gamers and their many distinctions... how about generally?
Does anyone still feel a strange stigma or unsettling feeling if you're either mentioned as, or say you are a gamer? I still dont feel its a social norm of the masses to be an accepted thing. Although I've embraced my gamerness and will wear shirts and such proudly professing my hobby, you cant help but still feel a bit of ostracizing that happens if you speak about it openly to non-gamers.
tl;dr I agree that the distinction aids things, people are just assholes that have twisted it in to meaning something that directly benefits their ego.