Games are interactive, movies are passive. Makes sense to me.
Also, there’s the cost and community aspect of games. For the price of a movie ticket and popcorn, I can buy a game that I can play with friends for easily dozens of hours instead of us silently sitting next to each other for an hour or two.
With the increasing death of third places and the increasing cost of existing outside, video games have become their own sort of third place for people to get together and just hang out.
I’d still rather play video games than watch a movie, and I’m in my 40s.
I’m rapidly approaching 40, but I’m there too.
Most “normal” people see watching a movie or playing a game as a passive experience, you’re “doing nothing.”
For me that couldn’t be more wrong. I almost never “just” watch a movie or show, that’s wayyyy too passive for me. Playing a game is engaging, you may not be physically running around, but you absolutely are “doing something.”
I’m a millennial but same.
Movies suck ass right now. And honestly videogames too.
Videogames have replay value though so I can stick to the good ones from the past.
Movies have rewatch value up to a point.
Make a movie we want to see and we’ll watch it.
I’ve never been a movie person, always preferred video games. Besides, many video games are like movies these days, but you interact with them.
What’s the max age of someone in Gen Z? Because when I was a kid, this was definitely true for me too.
36% of all gamers are 18-34.
25% of all gamers are 35-54.
As of right now, 25-34 year olds average 37 minutes per day of video games (4.3 hours per week). 35-44 averages 21 minutes per day (2.45 hours per week).
These averages are more interesting when peering into the breakdown by age group. (Removing people who don’t play at all by age) to show in 30-39 year olds 67% playing games between 1 and 20 hours per week. 76% of those 18-29.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/202839/time-spent-playing-games-by-social-gamers-in-the-us/