Stop Acting Like Games Are Dying—They’re Not About You Anymore

Nintendo isn’t going anywhere. They’ve been through ups and downs for decades, and they always have more stuff cooking than most of us could ever play. PlayStation isn’t about to die either. Xbox? Honestly—who even cares half the time—but even Microsoft isn’t packing up shop tomorrow.

The truth is, there are already more games than a grown adult with a job, family, and responsibilities could ever realistically finish. If you’re a grown man, sitting there arguing online about how “gaming is over” or whining about “childish graphics,” maybe the problem isn’t the games—it’s you.

Every time I see some loudmouth complain that a game looks “too childish,” I just think: You’re old. Let the kids have their fun. Gaming isn’t solely about your nostalgia or your expectations anymore. New generations deserve games that speak to them, just like you once had.

And the meta arguments? The endless debates about balance, DPS charts, and tier lists? It’s exhausting. Imagine spending your day fighting strangers online about whether Weapon X has slightly higher crit damage—meanwhile, the biggest achievement you can claim is the size of your beer belly.

Games are supposed to be fun. If you’ve forgotten that, or if you’re so bitter that you can’t let new players and younger audiences enjoy things, maybe step back. Touch grass. Pay some bills. The industry isn’t dying just because a game didn’t cater to your personal wishlist.

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