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<blockquote data-quote="Cor Azer" data-source="post: 6025272" data-attributes="member: 870"><p>To be fair, one thing thing many RPGs don't do well is distinguish between intelligence and education.</p><p></p><p>I don't necessarily think gamers are more intelligent, but there is likely a strong correlation to gamers being more educated.</p><p></p><p>- many gamers got their start in college/university</p><p>- many RPGs use a lot of esoteric words to try to differentiate various concepts</p><p>- many RPGs encourage (?) research into historical periods, or various non-fiction tomes to inspire settings and adventures</p><p>- many RPGs present (even if actual campaigns don't feature) the options for puzzles and the like, and while solving puzzles does not necessarily correlate with intelligence, a lot of people associate the solving of puzzles with an intellectual pursuit (crosswords, sudoku, Rubik's Cube)</p><p></p><p>What's more, most/many people associate with people of similar interests, so if one educated person gets into gaming, he or she is more likely to draw in new gamers from his similarly educated circle of friends. Thus you get a bit of reinforcing spiral - the "first" gamers were educated, and they brought in their educated friends, and they brought in theirs, etc...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cor Azer, post: 6025272, member: 870"] To be fair, one thing thing many RPGs don't do well is distinguish between intelligence and education. I don't necessarily think gamers are more intelligent, but there is likely a strong correlation to gamers being more educated. - many gamers got their start in college/university - many RPGs use a lot of esoteric words to try to differentiate various concepts - many RPGs encourage (?) research into historical periods, or various non-fiction tomes to inspire settings and adventures - many RPGs present (even if actual campaigns don't feature) the options for puzzles and the like, and while solving puzzles does not necessarily correlate with intelligence, a lot of people associate the solving of puzzles with an intellectual pursuit (crosswords, sudoku, Rubik's Cube) What's more, most/many people associate with people of similar interests, so if one educated person gets into gaming, he or she is more likely to draw in new gamers from his similarly educated circle of friends. Thus you get a bit of reinforcing spiral - the "first" gamers were educated, and they brought in their educated friends, and they brought in theirs, etc... [/QUOTE]
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