I have zero problems with people not liking something. Heck, I understand that. My problem is when people couch their criticisms in buzz words that have a million different definitions. "It's not D&D" is a good one. What the heck does that really mean? "It's videogamey" is another good one. Does that mean that the game runs extremely smoothly and well and rarely has any play problems? Somehow I don't think so, yet, that would be a good definition of video-gamey.
The common word "quality" is one with a definition that is very hard to pin down--what does it mean, exactly, if I say I have quality furniture in my home, that it's expensive? well-made? old? ergonomic? not in need of replacement?--but that doesn't stop people from using the word and, more importantly, from other people getting a good enough idea as to the word's meaning that the conversation can continue.
To you, the exact nature of "videogame-y" is vague or broad, but maybe it's vagueness is why the word seems to have caught on, and why people will chime in and say, "Yup, I get that sense too," without having a perfect idea of what is being described.
And while I'd like to describe to you specifically why I might feel that way about certain games, I would hate to start an "edition war" over the topic or get this thread locked.
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