Actually, it *isn't* a caution that negates the collective opinions from being accurately representational when the sample size is large enough.
The behavior of a sample is expected to reflect the population as the sample size grows only if the sample is taken randomly from the population*.
By definition, a self-selected group is not taken randomly from the population. They are selected from the population by their choices.
The posters of EN World (or any other particular messageboard, or even all messageboards together) are not chosen at random from the gamer population, so they are not a representative statistical sample, period. It really is that simple.
There are ways to correct results when a representative sample is not available, but they are mathematically complex, and generally require you know in detail how your sample differs from the general population.
*Edit: I should add - this is where the term "selection bias" comes from - it is the bias in results that comes from non-random sample selection. "Self-selection bias" is just what you get when the sample selects itself out of the randomness, as opposed to when the researcher does it.
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