I do the tourist thing now with WoW but I’m still talking with players, especially since my duo partner never stops playing.
Less so now, though, since /r/wow was where I participated the most.
I do the tourist thing now with WoW but I’m still talking with players, especially since my duo partner never stops playing.
Less so now, though, since /r/wow was where I participated the most.
I was selling countless pre-orders at retail going back to 2001. I don’t know when this mythical time would have been either.
Ultimately, the vast majority of people making pre-orders aren’t here, on reddit, or any gaming community. And frankly, with the rate at which physical print runs are shrinking, people are going to find they will need to pre-order if they want a physical copy of anything not AAA.
More than half of my personal follows on Twitter are enthusiastically jumping over. I don’t spend a lot of time on Twitter these days, so maybe I hadn’t realized it was bad enough to send people running happily into the arms of Meta.
Something I’ve noticed as I’ve shifted more of my conversations from Reddit to Discord (even before the garbage fire over at the site) is that I’m not looking up stuff as much during instant, short-form communication. Just casual conversation really is okay sometimes. I’ll be trying to keep that in mind as I spend more time on Reddit alternatives.
I also have a theory that message board conversations spend as much time on opinion as they do because all the little shit has been solved now that we have esoteric information at our fingertips. Some people don’t even know what it was like to be sitting around with friends all trying to figure out what 80’s film you saw Robert Loggia in because you couldn’t just look it up on-demand.
Deck Nine is also on this, and I thought their Life is Strange games were pretty good (Before the Storm, True Colors).