• Bobby Turkalino
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      32 days ago

      And there are some games which are basically interactive movies, e.g. Last of Us and Life is Strange

    • @[email protected]
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      193 days ago

      Also, there’s the cost and community aspect of games. For the price of a movie ticket and popcorn, I can buy a game that I can play with friends for easily dozens of hours instead of us silently sitting next to each other for an hour or two.

      With the increasing death of third places and the increasing cost of existing outside, video games have become their own sort of third place for people to get together and just hang out.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    I’m a millennial but same.

    Movies suck ass right now. And honestly videogames too.

    Videogames have replay value though so I can stick to the good ones from the past.

    Movies have rewatch value up to a point.

    Make a movie we want to see and we’ll watch it.

    • @[email protected]
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      93 days ago

      A lot of AAA games may suck right now but there’s so many awesome indie games that it’s hard to care.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 days ago

      To me it’s even simpler than that. Games are by design more engaging than movies, so I chose to play games.

    • @[email protected]
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      33 days ago

      I wouldn’t even say that movies suck right now, I just have a hard time giving attention to something for 2hrs straight with no form of interactivity.

    • @[email protected]
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      173 days ago

      I’m rapidly approaching 40, but I’m there too.

      Most “normal” people see watching a movie or playing a game as a passive experience, you’re “doing nothing.”

      For me that couldn’t be more wrong. I almost never “just” watch a movie or show, that’s wayyyy too passive for me. Playing a game is engaging, you may not be physically running around, but you absolutely are “doing something.”

      • @[email protected]
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        93 days ago

        That’s what I’ve been saying for years. It’s an entirely different activity that happens to involve blankly staring at a screen

  • Lad
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    143 days ago

    I’ve never been a movie person, always preferred video games. Besides, many video games are like movies these days, but you interact with them.

  • @[email protected]
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    133 days ago

    What’s the max age of someone in Gen Z? Because when I was a kid, this was definitely true for me too.

          • @[email protected]
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            43 days ago

            Pretty sad. I guess this is why there’s a genocide going on.

            If people would spend that time doing something productive, the world would be a better place.

            • @[email protected]
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              53 days ago

              Oh? Would getting shot in the head protesing in Israel be more productive? I donno about you, but I work my ass off and would love to take some time at the end of the day with a game or movie. Unfortunately, I’m not rich enough to stop a genocide half a world away.

        • @[email protected]
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          143 days ago

          My mom is in her late 70s, still working and flying around for gigs, and she always has her Switch and Breath of the Wild or TOKT with her on flights.

          Gaming transcends any age.

        • Encrypt-Keeper
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          3 days ago

          Yes this. So many people don’t know that in all 50 states it actually becomes illegal to have fun after your 25th birthday.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          36% of all gamers are 18-34.
          25% of all gamers are 35-54.

          As of right now, 25-34 year olds average 37 minutes per day of video games (4.3 hours per week). 35-44 averages 21 minutes per day (2.45 hours per week).

          These averages are more interesting when peering into the breakdown by age group. (Removing people who don’t play at all by age) to show in 30-39 year olds 67% playing games between 1 and 20 hours per week. 76% of those 18-29.

          https://www.statista.com/statistics/202839/time-spent-playing-games-by-social-gamers-in-the-us/

        • @[email protected]
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          93 days ago

          that’s a little old to be playing with interactive entertainment which engages your strategic thinking and problem solving skills, passively consume some content like a grown adult instead

    • @[email protected]
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      93 days ago

      I mean, games are like interactive movies now. RDR2? Cyberpunk 2077? They’re great fiction and you get to be the main character. I was never a gamer, I would play here and there but could never play more than like an hour a day. Now? Especially the two games I mentioned, it blew my mind how much I could play those games. They’re excellent pieces of media.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 days ago

        Hell yeah. And we get to shape our own stories this way. Game writing is different than movie writing. We get to express values.

  • @[email protected]
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    93 days ago

    Millennials grew up with some pretty awesome movies. Gen Z and Alpha grew up with some pretty awesome video games. Makes sense.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 days ago

    I wonder if this might be related to the idea that modern media consumption habits are potentially trashing people’s attention spans

    • snooggums
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      113 days ago

      No, it is just human nature to want to do things they find more engaging. For most people games are more engaging than movies which are more engaging that books. Younger people are just more likely to have experience with all three.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 days ago

        Yeah. Its immediate gratification.

        You can get into a cod or fortnite game in less than five minutes from boot to boots on the ground. You can get into a fight in an open world game in even less time. And so forth.

        If you aren’t into the (delightful) love story? The (extended cut) Fall Guy is 20 minutes to the first stunt and about 45 minutes to the first fight scene. Personally? I think the movie would have benefited from even more time with Ryan Gosling just crying to some t swizzle in the car but it (like Drive, another spectacular Gosling film that nobody but me likes) was marketed as an action movie and people are going to just take out their phones or their gameboys if you make them wait that long.

        Its similar logic to “I don’t have time to watch a 90 minute movie tonight. So instead I’ll watch six episodes of a tv show”

        • Executive Chimp
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          63 days ago

          On the flip side many people put 100+ hours into a single game and a movie lasts maybe 2. Games can have delayed gratification too.

        • snooggums
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          53 days ago

          I think instant engagement is a better description than instant gratification. Some books, movies, and games can pull off quick engagment but a lot have a gradual buildup as well. A gradual buildup with audio, visual, and active participation is just easier to become engaged quickly.

          Some games do have rapid engagement on subsequent plays like you mentioned, although I would say COD has a pretty slow engagement for me when it starts up after an update and makes me watch those short background clips I don’t care about. Much slower than the cold open on good comedy shows or the opening scene of Jurrasic Park.

      • @[email protected]
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        53 days ago

        I’m not sure it can just be that though, millennials have experience of all three too, why does the trend apparently exclude them?

        I will sometimes pick a game, sometimes a movie, sometimes a book—all can be equally engaging IMO

        • @[email protected]
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          73 days ago

          Took way too long to find it in the actual report (page 12 of https://www.theesa.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Essential-Facts-2024-FINAL.pdf)) but it is 63% Gen Z, 55% Millenials, 33% GenX, and 14% Boomers. Nothing is being “excluded”.

          And the trend makes sense. GenX and older Millenials were the tipping point where games went from “for losers” to “for everyone”. But also? GenX and Millenials have families and careers. Playing a game gets a lot more difficult when you have kids swarming around whereas putting on a movie is something the whole family can enjoy. Same with just not wanting to touch a computer “of any form” (and ignoring that your streaming box is also a computer…) after a long day of work.

        • rigatti
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          33 days ago

          Gaming was more popular and more accessible when Gen Z was growing up, so probably more of them developed a preference for it.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          The article doesn’t mention Millennials at all, but the video game market jumped over the box office before Gen Z was old enough to play games.