overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
The two most common and most pernicious cognitive biases are “I like it therefore it’s objectively good” and “I don’t like it therefore it’s objectively bad.” When people like a thing they will justify it to no end. Ignore its flaws, accentuate its advantages. And when they dislike a thing they’ll do the reverse.
You get a particular glimpse behind the curtain when a new edition of D&D arrives. After grieving, people will be more honest about what they like and don’t like about the game. While descending armor class and THAC0 were the only options they were fine. People grumbled but dealt with it. Once ascending armor class and attack bonuses were a thing, suddenly “everyone always” hated the old way. And now there’s a whole resurgence of people loving and playing the old way. I’ve watched people I play with both attack and defend things like this depending on what the newest edition says is right and good.
To dislodge the notion of popularity equating to quality you only have to look at the New York Times bestseller list and the pulp magazines of the 1920s through 1940s. I absolutely adore the pulps. They were the single most popular form of entertainment for a few decades, but anyone who’s read them—even hardcore fans such as myself—would be quick to tell you they’re not exactly the most masterfully executed writing…even for their time. High popularity, fairly low quality.
People are weird in that they feel the need to justify and defend the things they like and attack the things they dislike.
The most unpopular opinion of all: it’s okay to like trash. Given Sturgeon’s law, you already do.
You get a particular glimpse behind the curtain when a new edition of D&D arrives. After grieving, people will be more honest about what they like and don’t like about the game. While descending armor class and THAC0 were the only options they were fine. People grumbled but dealt with it. Once ascending armor class and attack bonuses were a thing, suddenly “everyone always” hated the old way. And now there’s a whole resurgence of people loving and playing the old way. I’ve watched people I play with both attack and defend things like this depending on what the newest edition says is right and good.
To dislodge the notion of popularity equating to quality you only have to look at the New York Times bestseller list and the pulp magazines of the 1920s through 1940s. I absolutely adore the pulps. They were the single most popular form of entertainment for a few decades, but anyone who’s read them—even hardcore fans such as myself—would be quick to tell you they’re not exactly the most masterfully executed writing…even for their time. High popularity, fairly low quality.
People are weird in that they feel the need to justify and defend the things they like and attack the things they dislike.
The most unpopular opinion of all: it’s okay to like trash. Given Sturgeon’s law, you already do.
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