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Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
Sorry Rock God - I don't have any of those things. The Hamurabi I played on the pdp8 didn't come in a box (LOL I had it on paper tape!!) The first Zork I played was on a sperry univac machine, not a PC. I did eventually buy the version for a commodore 64 and I've got the source around somewhere for the pc...
People - just change the definition to "I like games and I play games"...
PS: I do have a pile of boxes around for numerous adventure games - the packaging was so nice then it's hard to get rid of them...
- "I like to read novels."
- "Oh so you're a reader."
- "Wait what books do you read and how often? We have to verify if you're a real reader or not!"
- "Oh you only enjoy graphic novels, you aren't one of us."
Just enjoy your preferred entertainment pastime without worrying about labels.
Seems overly cynical about the nature of human beings, but I understand the thinking due to how some act over social media. You just have to separate the trash from the good.
Jokes aside, here is a difference between a person that invests emotionaly and just a person who sometimes plays, sometimes reads and sometimes goes to theather. The lines can be really blurry but they do exist. But its not like opinion on your person by some anonymous individual in the net is that important anyway. So indeed, who cares really?
Being a "gamer" doesn't actually mean all that much socially -- since there are so many types of videogames as well as so many different people playing them, and any two "gamers" aren't necessarily going to be able to talk much about their hobby to each other (imagine someone who's intiminately familiar with MMORPGs and big-budget JRPGs trying to talk to someone who pretty much only plays 2D indie metroidvanias and challenge platformers).