Factual doesn't make your argument less of a strawman.No it isn't. All three components of that statement are factual. I suppose you could say that claiming the first Iron Man Movie was good could be considered merely an opinion (backed up by audience reviews to show that it was the prevailing opinion) but it certainly isn't a strawman.
Just because you're not aware of it doesn't mean it never existed. There was no internet back then.None of this really addresses the point? I am completely unaware of any spider-man movie before the Ramey films. Looking it up, there were some films back in the 80's, which I have literally never heard anyone talk about before.
Are you REALLY suggesting that hardcore fans want only origin stories?!!!!!!!!!!But, let's look at the actual point I was making. The Raimi films were good. Brought Spider-Man to the big screen. Then they made the Amazing Spider-Man movies as a reboot which... didn't do as good. Then they told Spider-Man's story as part of the MCU, which did quite a bit better. Neither of those two can touch how impactful Spiderverse has been though.
So what makes MCU Spider-Man and Spiderverse different from Amazing Spider-Man? You can just say "better writing" and dismiss it as unimportant, but the MCU Spider-Man was not telling the origin story of Spider-Man. It wasn't just Peter Parker dealing with criminals in New York. It was Peter Parker dealing with the fallout of Civil War, informed by the Invasion from Avengers, and navigating a relationship with Tony Stark. It was a Spider-Man most people had never seen before. And Spider-Verse? Also dealing with a version of Spider-Man most people have not seen before.
Yeah, I agree painting them as a monolith helps your case.The pattern is that hardcore fans largely don't advocate for the changes that are actually good. They advocate for extending the status quo. Because they are fans of the status quo.
I can only see the reasonable side of this conversation, but as an aside I am a huge fan of how the Toho live action kaiju Spiderman TV show, where Spiderman has a sentient alien Leopard mecha companion named Leopardon, directly inspired Super Sentai and thus ultimately Power Rangers.
Factual doesn't make your argument less of a strawman.
Just because you're not aware of it doesn't mean it never existed. There was no internet back then.
Are you REALLY suggesting that hardcore fans want only origin stories?!!!!!!!!!!
Is this really the thrust of your argument in relation to Spiderman?
Yeah, I agree painting them as a monolith helps your case.
I guess nothing has ever happened in the last 50 years in comics....who knew that those silly silly hardcore fans just don't want new stories.
You mention Ironman who you said was not top tier and that they made a movie about him as if Hardcore fans would take an issue at making a movie about Ironman.And just calling something a strawman doesn't make it a bad opening point in a discussion. I don't even know what your issue with the example of the Iron Man movie is, all you've done is point and say "STRAWMAN!!!" like that is in anyway meaningful. Unless you are showcasing the Fallacy Fallacy you don't really have a counter-point here.
Well gosh golly, no internet?! Why that must have been something. Completely meaningless as a point though. I've listened to an awful lot of comic book and movie criticisms and critiques. I've listened to people talk about the Superman Radio Play and that happened before the internet. So did the original release of Watchmen. The original Nosferatu movie. Lot of things before the internet.
So.... what? I can't say that the Raimi films were good movies made when spider-man movies weren't in the culture zeitgeist because 20 years prior someone, somewhere, made a spider-man movie that didn't do nearly as well? That's a really poor and bad argument to make.
Well lookie there. A Strawman argument!
See, I said the PATTERN is that hardcore fans, as fans of the Status Quo, LARGELY do not argue for good changes.
Does that make them a monolith? Not in the slightest.
Does that mean they ONLY want origin stories? Not in the slightest.
Does that mean nothing has ever happened in any medium with hardcore fans? Not in the slightest.
Does that mean new stories don't exist? Not in the slightest.
So.... every single critique you have of my argument is factually wrong and has nothing at all to do with what I said, except to take it to an extreme position that cannot be defended, so you can easily knock it down. You know.. like a straw man.
Hardcore fans of Star Wars recently (I don't know how recently) lost their minds, because a character in the new Acolyte show, who was a minor character in the prequel movies, had his birthday "changed". And by changed, I mean that his birth year was mentioned once in material that is no longer canon, and was recently re-established in canon, for this show, for the purposes of having him as a character in the show. These are the same hardcore fans who propose ideas for Star Wars that are just taking established characters and placing them in established conflicts. The same people who wanted to see how Han Solo stole the Millenium Falcon.
They are not the people who came up with the ideas in Andor, which took a completely different tone, to my knowledge only had like one or two previously known about characters, and completely lacks Jedi. And is also wildly popular and successful.
Did one person who claims to be a hardcore fan, at one point, suggest a new idea that was actually good? Sure, yeah, I bet they did. But as a PATTERN, a TREND, a GENERAL RULE OF THUMB NOT UNIVERSALLY TRUE, hardcore fans don't suggest the weird and interesting takes, they don't suggest breaking the established story. Which is why you need fresh takes. New Perspectives.
And to turn this to DnD again... it wasn't hardcore, self-identified grognards who came up with Humblewood, Grim Hollow or Wandering Tavern. They were the ones suggesting Mystara, Birthright, Darksun, established IPs that are already part DnD.
Yes, I would agree that old timers have tried more games. We are a market for D&D though and if D&D is our primary game then we will spend a lot on it.
I think a lot of those people who don’t go back quite so far don’t realise that there where a lot of other RPGs around in those early days, and a lot of people who were not TSR making D&D stuff.I'm just noting that the assumption that older gamers will be automatically spending their game dollars on D&D seems a bit overextended. I'm nearly as old a gamer as it gets, and while I probably spend more money on games than I should, I haven't spent any on D&D proper since the 3e days.
I can't say for how many this is true, but just the maths of market growth suggests its more true of older gamers than younger.
I think a lot of those people who don’t go back quite so far don’t realise that there where a lot of other RPGs around in those early days, and a lot of people who were not TSR making D&D stuff.
You mention Ironman who you said was not top tier and that they made a movie about him as if Hardcore fans would take an issue at making a movie about Ironman.
You mentioned the fact that the 2nd Spidey movie series did poorly but the 3rd did well because of a different intro on the hero. As if hardcore fans would have an issue with that.
You seem to equate in those examples that innovativeness does not exist with hardcore fans. Or that change is unacceptable.
No one cares of what the 5% on either side of the spectrum seek (Absolutists and the Change 4 the sake of Change - which sound like Planescape ideologies).
With regards to D&D if you actually care to do a real comparison and not represent new settings as something Hardcore fans are supposedly opposed to (in the same vein you used Ironman) - why don't you use the example of 4e Forgotten Realms? Or Pathfinder?