🐱 The gamer boyfriend, explained

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
CatParty



I usually trawl through various Reddit forums and friends’ brains for my column ideas, and as much as I try to avoid it, there is one question that floats up above all the rest — what the fuck am I supposed to do with my gamer boyfriend?

No really, the people want to know. “Am I (25F) asking my gamer BF (24M) for too much [by asking him to spend time with me]?” “Every time we play together, [my boyfriend] legit drives me crazy.” “In the middle of getting turned inside out, but his friend called and said get on [the server].”

Problems with the gamer boyfriend range from mild (he spends too much time gaming, something that could be fixed with an honest conversation) to severe (he gets frighteningly angry during a bad game, he reveals his deeply sown misogyny whenever you ask a simple gaming question), but regardless of the problem, to truly understand the Gaming Boyfriend, we need to know where he came from.


Figuratively, at least. Although it’s difficult to pinpoint an exact origin date of a certain kind of boyfriend, gamer culture began to take shape in the 1980s, after the first U.S. video game boom in the 1970s and the establishment of hobby magazines around the same time. In a 2014 Medium post, role-playing expert Jon Peterson writes that, by the mid-1960s, the word “gamer” was almost exclusively used to refer to men who played wargames. In a Polygon article also written in 2014, Peterson explains that when games moved to electronics, the maleness of “gamer” moved with them.

Over time, the idea of the male gamer encompassed all the worst qualities of manhood, like territorialism and brutality, a public perception that devastating events like 1999’s Columbine shooting and 2014’s Gamergate only reinforced. Now, although “gamer” has opened up to a much more inclusive term, “gamer guy” still has the connotation of slimy, emotionally stunted, mom’s basement-dweller, a fairly damning categorization for guys looking to date, let alone become someone’s boyfriend.

And so, this is the story of the Gamer Boyfriend, who shot up a pixel river and drowned the whole World Wide Web. As difficult as it can be to accept, social expectation and historical context helps sculpt who we are and what we become. That’s why some gamer boyfriends are splotched with the mud of gamer history, always male and misunderstood by the general public. If they aren’t too careful, boyfriends can yank their partners down on the hard ground with them, creating a fragile imprint, an easily burst relationship.

But gamer boyfriends, I want to see you and your relationship thriving. A lot of your partners’ first introduction to gaming may come through you, and you need to make them feel safe and comfortable as they learn. You need to be honest about who you speak to and how — yes, I mean those chat rooms and Discord servers where you’re free to be offensive or callous. It’s nearly impossible to break that way of speaking and thinking off your whole self, and your partner suffers because of it.

But of course, every relationship is a two-way street. Everyone should feel content to share what they want and need with a partner; if you don’t, regardless of who you are and how many video games you play, it might be time to reevaluate your relationship.

So, know this, gamer boyfriends — an unhappy relationship is rarely your fault alone. But you could at least walk her through her first game of League, couldn’t you?
 
I can see 2 trends in American culture. One seems to be led by the powers that shouldn't be, driving adults to be coddled and overly dependent like kids, so they can be more easily controlled. The older trend is overly obsessed with "putting away childish things" to the point where it seems it's "no fun allowed" as an adult. There needs to be a middle ground between fixating on growing up and coddling.

So enjoying vidya as an adult isn't always bad, but playing vidya too much can cause problems.

I'm tired of them rewriting history.
They want an endless present in which The Party the woke are always right the "right side of history"?
 
Lots of manchildren butthurt over their precious vidya. Don't take my toys away or I'll throw a tantrum. Do what a real man does and create something with your hands in your spare time. Consooming all the time ain't good for the soul.
I agree with that, but unless you're some lumberjack in a cabin without even Internet (nope) then you're basically LARPing as one for the image without actually living that lifestyle.

I'm sure you listen to music, watch movies, and/or read books. Usually, if not always, a person who hates on video games specifically does mental gymnastics to make excuses for why it's okay to watch a movie but not play a video game.

And do you not play board games with family/friends around the holidays? Would a group playing the PS4 version of Monopoly earn your scathing criticism, as you do the same thing but with paper? You a paper supremacist or something?

Tldr; I doubt you're consistent, there's no way all you do is "make shit with your hands" because you've obviously got an online presence.
 
I agree with that, but unless you're some lumberjack in a cabin without even Internet (nope) then you're basically LARPing as one for the image without actually living that lifestyle.

I'm sure you listen to music, watch movies, and/or read books. Usually, if not always, a person who hates on video games specifically does mental gymnastics to make excuses for why it's okay to watch a movie but not play a video game.

And do you not play board games with family/friends around the holidays? Would a group playing the PS4 version of Monopoly earn your scathing criticism, as you do the same thing but with paper? You a paper supremacist or something?

Tldr; I doubt you're consistent, there's no way all you do is "make shit with your hands" because you've obviously got an online presence.
I never said all I do is make shit, of course I consume but there's a difference between reading a book for an hour a night vs playing games for hours at a time. Games are usually made to be addictive and ruin your reward system and fuck with your dopamine. I exaggerate for fun and don't see anything wrong with playing a game a few times a week for 30 to 60 minutes but admit it, that's not usually how it goes down.
 
I never said all I do is make shit, of course I consume but there's a difference between reading a book for an hour a night vs playing games for hours at a time. Games are usually made to be addictive and ruin your reward system and fuck with your dopamine. I exaggerate for fun and don't see anything wrong with playing a game a few times a week for 30 to 60 minutes but admit it, that's not usually how it goes down.
yeah in practice video games are designed to be massive time sinks for people who have nothing better to do with their lives (aka losers)
 
fuck me that girlfriend sounds toxic as fuck

ditch her king and after we come back from the strip club we can play some diablo 2 and drink some beers
 
I never said all I do is make shit, of course I consume but there's a difference between reading a book for an hour a night vs playing games for hours at a time. Games are usually made to be addictive and ruin your reward system and fuck with your dopamine. I exaggerate for fun and don't see anything wrong with playing a game a few times a week for 30 to 60 minutes but admit it, that's not usually how it goes down.
My point was that an unhealthy amount of any entertainment is, well, unhealthy. It's got nothing to do with the type of entertainment.

Wasting hours away online doing dumb shit like social media is just as bad as gaming for hours, if not worse. And nobody does anything in perfectly timed one-hour blocks, even one movie is at least 90 minutes but often two hours.

TV watching was always an addictive activity but with streaming it's become common for people to binge watch even more than ever, and these services encourage it.

Worst thing is many people combine all this shit, watching TV, playing games, and staring at their phones every free moment they have. It's just short-sighted to pick out video games. If anything phones are consuming people more than anything, especially young people.
 
Back
Top Bottom