- Joined
- Feb 19, 2017
The cringiest thing is how "gamer" is an identity, mostly of overweight manchildren and edgy not-super-duper-attractive women, engaging in a perpetual childhood of mindless entertainment and corporate intellectual property. Rarely do they appreciate anything of real art, cinema, literature, etc. I know I sound pretentious, but it's all the same shit with them. Learn how to play the piano or discover 80s funk and soul music or whatever, just try to be a more diversified person. If the piece of "art" that made you cry the most in your life was the Aeris death scene then you're a fucking faggot that needs to grow up.
OK Hipster
You do have a point about some people take it way too seriously, but the whole "real art" bullshit is pretentious and cringe-inducing in its own equal and opposite way.
Really, the people who take vidya way too seriously and the pretentious "true art" culture crowd are two sides of the same coin in my opinion.
But then again, I'm just a common man with common tastes and believe insufferable faggots are extremely common in every subculture, hobby, and medium.
Like, I may dislike the MCU and the consoomer vidya, but that doesn't mean I want to be some fart-huffing pseudo-intellectual snob who only likes the most pretentious boring indie films and music. Fuck that shit too.
Yeah, I'll admit I enjoy video games and anime and other "mindless entertainment", but I also enjoy reading about history and old-school movies of both the low-brow grindhouse fare and the kind of stuff like Scorsese does. I also love me some classic rock and heavy metal, and I also enjoy disco, 70's funk and soul, pop hits from the 1950's-1970's, and stuff like bluegrass and traditional folk and country music.
But to end the post on a more positive note so I don't come across as MATI, I admit your post does illustrate two good points.
One is how the Millennials and Gen Z have both substituted their hobby for an actual identity and personality, and the other is that we don't seem to have any "middlebrow" pop culture anymore.
Like they don't make the kind of movies that are more sophisticated than the typical consoomer capeshit flick, but aren't pretentious indie arthouse snob fare either. The only one I can think of who still does that type of stuff is Martin Scorsese, and only because he's been consistently at it since the 70's.
I think the demise of middlebrow pop culture and the deepening chasm between "lowbrow consoomer trash vs. highbrow pretentious indie trash" in pop culture had a lot to do with the demise of mid-budget entertainment after the 2008 recession, and that's something that can be felt in movies, TV, books, and video games.