Yea farmville and Oblivion?Sure I will agree Morrowind was much more in depth than Oblivion and "crowd friendly" but from Oblivion to Farmville. As long as there is a market for the video games we all play, Farmville, Anrgy Birds etc. will never be the the only games around. They are two different genres that will not completely take over one another in our lifetime.
True, but don't expect gamers that profess the childish mentally that they're somehow
better than other gamers because they play so called "hardcoe" games to see reason, if they had the mental capacity to do so, they'd no better than to engage in such nonsense.
In the end, we have our Facebook games, and we have other things, and each offers a different experience that appeals to different preferences, and there's room for all to coexist, and so long as there's a market for other things, games like Farmville will not replace other genres. Certainly, there's a larger market for some types of games than others, so naturally, more developers will want to make that kind of game, that's just smart business there, but that doesn't mean only those types of games will be made, it just means that there will generally be a larger selection of games that appeal to a larger market, you know... like in every other industry. Social network games may be a fairly large market in gaming, for now, at least, but that doesn't mean they'll replace other games, just as MMORPGs were able to become quite popular while not replacing other genres (Admitably, it seems in the MMO industry, what often happens is that one game or a few select games will dominate the market and although many competitors are replaced, they continue failing to usurp said dominate position, just look at WoW.) And I also wouldn't be surprised if a lot of people that play such games are not really "serious gamers" (By which I mean, in this case, simply people who play games extensively, as opposed to just having played a game at some point, what I say has nothing to do with the "hardcoe vs casual" nonsense that is disturbingly common on these forums.). Obviously, they're primary target demographic is people who use social networking websites, and a lot of people who use Facebook or whatever are not gamers themselves, it may be that their first experience with video gaming came from such games, and it may be that this will later lead to them experimenting with more conventional games. After all, every gamer must start somewhere, and I'd say it's likely that for most gamers, that would have been a game that's reletively easy to get into even for someone who has never touched a video game before. Certainly, I don't see other games failing as a result of Farmville or whatever other social network game you can name.