I know.I don't know how future MP gonna fix this.
I know.I don't know how future MP gonna fix this.
For me, I play games to kind of retreat from the world and get lost in a new one. I play to get away from other people and my social anxiety. Helps me recharge, so to speak. Plus most of my friends and I don't have schedules that align much, sadly, and I'm a bit too anxious to squad up with complete strangers. Add to that the lack of a proper story most of the time, the fact that my house is a bit too hectic to be on the mic, and various other factors, and... well, yeah. MP isn't for me, overall.
I used to be a multiplayer only gamer. Then I got older. Now I am 99% a single player only gamer.
Likely a fallacy because what the kids were playing 10, 20, and 30 years ago were largely single player games. What the kids are playing today, are multiplayer games.I saw this graphic a while ago, and while some were quick to panic that the "younger generation" preferred MP games, my interpretation of this graph was a positive correlation with age and preference for SP games. In other words, I think it to be generally true that as gamers age, they will naturally gravitate towards more single player experiences.
I'm not saying you're wrong, since obviously neither or us can predict the future.Likely a fallacy because what the kids were playing 10, 20, and 30 years ago were largely single player games. What the kids are playing today, are multiplayer games.
I think you're going to see the wave extend to the right over the next 20 years. It might lose a little size, as all waves do, but multiplayer will continue to grow with youth and the multiplayer waves will slowly grow over the years. Multiplayer is most likely growing in all age groups to diminishing degree.
I don't think your hypothesis here is crazy. I think there's likely a degree of truth to it.I'm not saying you're wrong, since obviously neither or us can predict the future.
That said, I think the externalities associated with aging makes single player games increasingly more attractive. When you're younger, you have synchronized schedules with your friends (school), which makes it easier to coordinate MP sessions, you also have more time to practice for competitive multiplayer.
As you get older, your friends get married and have kids, and everyone's differing work schedules make it harder to coordinate time to play. At an individual level, a person also has less time to practice competitive multi-player, and their reaction times start to dip with age. In this regard, I could see how a single player game which lets you easily control when you play, might be a more attractive option.