You used to play videogames all night. Your Quake prowess was unmatched; your skills at Command & Conquer unparalleled. You have a gaming history that stretches back beyond the PlayStation generation to the SNES, Megadrive, Amiga and ZX Spectrum. You were there at the dawn of gaming.
Tick-tock... Time passes. You've quietly come to realise that you're not the hard-core gamer you used to be. Even your Xbox 360 Gamertag seems far too 'sensible'. How do you know that a mid-life gaming crisis is setting in? Watch out for these warning signs…
You prefer playing against the computer
Online gaming against real people has become depressing – it exposes your faded, spoon-sharp reflexes and you abhor the trash-talk from 12-year old fanboys. You prefer playing offline against the computer because a game's algorithms are slightly more predictable. And, once you master the scripted patterns of play, you stand a real chance of being good… of actually winning. And that feels great, doesn't it? Ranking second-bottom on a multiplayer leader board doesn't.
You only play when your girlfriend is out
Because you only have one high-def TV and to play videogames on it while she's at home is 'selfish' and not something the two of you can do 'together'.

You believe that winning isn't everything
It's the taking part that counts. Obviously. And that's not because you're not good at games. You are. But you've found that there's more to life than spending five hours every night killing all of the Templars in Assassin’s Creed. The fact that you can't find the last three Templars is irrelevant.
It's been days, not hours since you last switched on your console
Because things keep getting in the way: TV, movies, books, going out to restaurants, shopping, going down the pub, DIY, dinner parties, the gym, more DIY, your girlfriend/wife/boyfriend [delete as applicable]… oh, and having a job.

You’re the oldest person trading in games at GameStation
So you lie about why you’re there. "It’s, ahem, my son's birthday. I'd like to trade these in for Guitar Hero please…"
You like your Xbox 360 and your PS3 equally
Being a more 'mature' gamer means you have more disposable income, so you can afford the luxury of owning a PS3 and an Xbox 360. So you've become the gaming equivalent of the United Nations, calming accepting the virtues of both consoles to the deaf ears of Xbox zealots and Sony fanboys (who simply ignore you and carry on their slanging match regardless). Because when you stare at those side-by-side game comparison shots on CVG, you can't see the difference. Maybe the PS3 palette is lighter… maybe… Of course, your eyesight could be failing…

You fondly remember a ‘golden age’ of gaming
You lament the current glut of videogame sequels and often talk fondly of an innovative 'golden age' of gaming. You remember Manic Miner, good ‘ol Chuckie Egg and the Ultimate games on the ZX Spectrum. You played Sensible Soccer the first time around on the Amiga, Elite on your mate’s BBC B, and finished Sonic The Hedgehog on the Megadrive. Happy days… But when modernised versions of these gaming classics turn up on Xbox Live, your excitement quickly evaporates. You quickly realise that, by today’s standards, those cherished oldies are now shallow, repetitive and not much fun.
You avoid playing on the Wii because it’s too much effort
There's no denying that the Nintendo Wii is a revolutionary games machine but… well, it does require a lot of effort. Aren't there times when you just want to slouch into a comfy sofa with a traditional joypad? Times when you can't be arsed with all that wiimote waving and waggling? It's way too energetic – a 20 minute bowling session in Wii Sports is almost akin to a full workout.


Your comments (26) Click to add a new comment
emanlaer
May 20th 2008
26. dang. that's tears it. you know you are getting old when you are pretty sure you beat the last GTA titles...but have this unsettling notion.. that maybe you didn't cuz you can't quite remember the ending... sigh.
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copabooey
May 15th 2008
25. I'm closing in on the big 5-0 and still play whenever I can. Although I suck badly as most games, I find it an enjoyable way to pass the time when weather prohibits me from playing outdoors.
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willm235
May 14th 2008
24. well I am 17 and already starting to experience these signs oh well I guess getting laid every night is better than being good at halo
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able
May 1st 2008
23. The Golden Age of games isn't the days of sloppy PAL ports of SNES games, or any thing as trivial (on its own as Sonic on the Mega Drive/Genesis), but the true Golden Age is happening right now.
The rest of the list is trivial, we get old, some of you breed, some don't, we would have to adopt if we wanted some insanity. ;)
Besides, my PC is also one of my gaming machines, and the 1st rule of Scouts: Have DS (or PSP), will travel.
Last, one cannot define oneself as hardcore, that is a description the one must earn. .. I cannot call myself hardcore because games are my main interest as way of spending time, with or without my partner, but I wouldn't base a human to be a hardcore gamer on skill alone. Those who don't know their history of gamesters and whatnot, even simple things like how Nintendo was at a time a third party.
Let us face it, kids have more free time than they think they do, their brains have more wiggle room than our compressed 33 year old brains, and they don't have carpal tunnel syndrome yet.
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benthemixmaster
April 30th 2008
22. This is Horrid.
I have lost all meaning in my life...
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piotrr
April 29th 2008
21. Less on the first, more of the latter. These aren't signs that you're "no longer a hard-core gamer", they're signs that you're 30.
Girlfriend? You mean you haven't married yet?
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