I agree that smaller groups tend to breed more positivity, but you just have to learn to deal with the idiots.
I' ve been posting regularly at GameSpot for a while now, and while you have to wade through tons of fanboy trash and the like, you DO find gamers like us, who wish only to talk about the hobby they love. For example, there is a System Wars forum over there, designed entirely to keep the fanboys in one place. It' s like a shepard herding the diseased flock into another area to keep the good pastures green and healthy. This tends to work well in the General Games Discussion.
However, it' s AWFULLY depressing just reading the topics and responses in the System Wars forum. 90% are blind fanboys, as you could guess, and it' s just one all-out flame war. Bash this, bash that. You know, there' s only one thing I hate more than a fanboy: a NEGATIVE fanboy. The days are long gone when someone would crow about the great games on their system of choice, saying how great this is and how great that is. Suddenly, it' s all swung to the negative. If you' re a GC fanboy, you don' t continually gloat about how great the system is...instead, you bash the Xbox and PS2 incessantly. This is a nasty trait that got out of hand in SW at GS.
So a few people, older members who just love games and find the entire SW thing depressing and annoying, created " System Wars 2." There' s 1/4 as many people in there, and half of it is off-topic. Most people know each other, and while the occasional fanboy sneaks through, the mods weed them out quickly. Better yet, they delete all posts and responses that fool may have had during his brief stay.
Arguments surrounding this entertainment venue are bound to arise. But then again, that' s the beauty of opinions. At leaast there' s no massive flaming.
People who are true gamers and just play what is fun for them are being stifled; stifled by a generation that only cares about the negative, and believes anything that' s tossed their way. It' s why games like Enter the Matrix and (inevitably) Rise to Honor, sell well. They' re not terrible games, but they' re not a patch on the truly great games. Uninformed gamers are sometimes irritating, but uninformed gamers with an attitude are even more irritating.
I think the best thing to do is to keep a core set of members who know each other and can kind of keep an eye on things, even if they' re not mods. How? Ignore the trash; i.e., don' t feed the trolls.
< Message edited by fathoms -- 2/29/2004 4:12:59 AM >