daal wrote:Knotwilg wrote:1. Does Kimmel have a point (answer: probably not, because there are many things akin to watching someone play a video game, such as watching sports, which you can ridicule)
You might remind yourself why you once proclaimed your distaste for analogies. Just because two things are similar does not make them the same. There is a difference between making fun of people watching sports and making fun of people sitting at a computer watching someone else sitting at their computer. First, the latter has an obvious humorous element whereas the former does not. Second, while both can serve as culture criticism, they are criticizing different elements of culture - for a start, laziness as opposed to screen fixation.
Analogies are different from comparisons (!). You compare watching sports with watching video game executions yourself here and while I don't agree with the comparison, it's a least a fairer argument than resolving to one to prove the other, which an analogy does.
Okay, I'll grant you that watching other people sit at a computer has a humorous element. I actually don't think the viewers are watching the bodies of the players, rather the screen. But it's the idea that matters. Yes, I find it somewhat funny. As I said in 2, that's something we can hardly argue about, we both find it funny.
Let's make a comparison:
- we watch a live game between Lee Sedol and Gu Li
- we watch a live game rendered online between them
- we watch an online game between them (whether or not staring at them mouse clicking)
Which one is funnier?
And how different is this from
- watching Barcelona - Man U on TV
- watching that match in FIFA 16
Is it the fact that physical capabilities are simulated or even bypassed in a video game that makes it so funny?
So watching someone play minecraft would be less funny (and closer to Go) than watching someone play GTA?
In the beginning I thought this discussion was futile but it becomes more interesting when participating in it than purely watching it
