@Sevenizz I don't think you can put CoD players and mobile game players in the same category. CoD gamers aren't casuals, they're actually more like the majority of gamers. The mobile/facebook casuals usually don't even know the layout of a controller well enough to play CoD with any sort of proficiency.
@Sevenizz Mobile games, really? So we can call my mom a gamer because she plays Bejeweled on her phone and Farmville on Facebook. Casual gamers are not the same kind of person that would sit and watch, let alone care at all, about E3. Notice how none of the press conferences highlight Facebook games or phone games? Imagine what your reaction would be if someone at Microsoft came out and told you about the catalogue of free to play games they have on their Windows Phone during an E3 press conference.
The casuals are gamers only to the extent that they are bored and want something to occupy their time. This is why the Wii U didn't hit off. Nintendo hit a casual gamer gold mine with the Wii and they thought they could keep those people around. But it didn't work because casuals aren't loyal. They aren't loyal because they don't care. They don't care because they aren't invested in it at all. This isn't really a hobby or a serious interest for them, it's just something to do.
@Vojtass @liquidbutter @Renoo27 I could rule in many of those games too if I could be couched by the developers of the game. Ubisoft owns Frag Dolls. They hire models (you need to send them like 20 photos of yourself before they even consider letting you into their "professional gamers" group) and teach them how to play Ubisoft games for marketing purposes.
@Renoo27 @liquidbutter Well she is hired by Ubisoft. It wouldn't be the first time they've hired pretty girls to be gamer eye-candy. They invented and own "Frag Dolls", a group of booth babes that play video games.
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