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The gentrification of videogame history

The gentrification of videogame history

10 comments

·September 17, 2025

Rover222

Distinct cultures having distinct video game cultures... author might as well say that French people gentrified food because French food is French. It's an interesting article, but I think the "gentrifying" angle is just cliche at this point.

PlanksVariable

There’s an interesting discussion here of how other country’s economies and cultures impacted their gaming.

But framing it as erasure, gentrification, Sinophobia, etc., seems totally unnecessary. Americans discuss gaming from their perspective and based on their own experiences and that’s OK. That’s authentic. If your perspective and experience is different, and of interest to a broader audience, just share it with the world!

homeonthemtn

This feels like bait of one form or another

apalmer

I don't think 'gentrification' is the right word for this. However the comments here do illustrate an underlying 'real' phenomenon what ever you call it.

Just for clarity: - Non-Japan Asia is new to gaming, and that's okay, it's going to take some time before they find their own voice.

This is not factually true, video games have one of the most popular forms of entertainment in non Japan Asia for 25 years. Nearly a quarter of humanity lives in non-japan asia. There were good non japanese games, bad non japanese games, and more than anything tons of 'mid' non japanese games. They aren't new too it, and they do have their own voices and styles.

What gets talked about as history of video gaming tends to reflect American video gaming history and the unavoidable influence of America's number one vassal state, Japan. Really this is the history of games marketed in North America and that's fine, it just isn't the whole history.

hamdingers

"Gentrification" was a great word to describe a very specific phenomenon, it's a shame it's been misused to the point of meaninglessness. I'm not even sure what OP thinks it means.

aranelsurion

> Asian free-to-play MMOs like MapleStory and Fantasy Journey to the West have always been more popular than World of Warcraft, but prejudice erased them.

Yeah no, it wasn't prejudice that erased them, but budget and quality. I mean just look at three screenshots of these games tell me you'd be as excited about them as you'd be about World of Warcraft, as a kid.

_345

Yeah lmao, I was well aware of maple story as a kid, it was advertised to me on the western websites I used growing up, it was just bad and clearly not as impressive as something loke WoW which I also didn't play but at a light glance I can clearly say it had a lot more effort put into it

_345

Maybe the other games just sucked? That screenshot of that vietnamese game we're supposed to feel bad for not knowing about looks awful, like any of the western mobile slop that's a dime a dozen. There is no fucking way on earth you're going to make me feel like I'm discounting "women's games" from gaming history by invoking a kim kardashian video game

ecshafer

When I was younger and had less money I tried to find a free alternative to World of Warcraft. I probably played every single free rpg and mmorpg out there. To be frank, they were universally garbage. This has changed a little bit with some newer games (Star Wars MMO freemium is pretty good). The reason some of these games are not talked about is that they were not as good, regardless of origin.

ivape

Alright, this is one place where I don't think the race discussion belongs. The fremium games being played over in Asia are just, literally, lower quality games. Americans have higher taste because it's always been a powerhouse for video games, they've explored and innovated a lot of genres. Non-Japan Asia is new to gaming, and that's okay, it's going to take some time before they find their own voice.

"But popular games in India will never be discussed outside of the country unless they’re first presented via a US-based media like IGN"

No. Even GREAT games in America are not being discussed because that's how advanced the gaming culture is here. We've been doing it awhile. There's just a lot of ground to cover for new players (literally), and again, that's okay.

Lastly, white Americans are very important to the history video games. They took it up, built it up, evolved it, and they did it very seriously (fuck man, I think they might have invented a lot of it). They are steeped in the history of gaming, so the "gentrification" charge is really insulting. It would be better to merge into this history than try to fork it and claim outlandish things, one because it's practical, two because its honorable.