Old gamers often misunderstand the quality of mobile games.

I realized this a couple of weeks ago when I asked my 12-year-old daughter whether she wanted to bring her Nintendo Switch or her Android tablet on our two-week vacation. She chose the tablet.

Why? Because her Android has Genshin Impact, Fortnite, Roblox, Candy Crush, Wuthering Waves, and Sky: Children of Light. She simply prefers those over her Switch library — which is decent but doesn’t compare to what she’s got on the tablet.

Adults tend to dismiss mobile gaming by saying things like, “There’s no 1:1 equivalent to Super Mario Odyssey, Tears of the Kingdom, or Cyberpunk 2077 on mobile.”

Fine. My daughter has access to all those games. Our family owns over 8,000 games across PC and consoles. She can play Super Mario Odyssey any time she wants, but she doesn’t. She’d rather play Genshin Impact.

And she’s not alone. Most of her friends are on their tablets or phones. It makes sense — gaming is as much about socializing as playing, and iOS and Android dominate for a reason.

Sure, we can scoff and say, “Kids these days don’t recognize a good game when it hits them in the face.”

But I remember feeling that way about Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh. They’re still thriving today, with now-grown adults still playing.

I also think back to my own childhood. My mom hated Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Yet, I snuck a TMNT Game Boy game into the house and played it behind her back. TMNT never disappeared — it’s still around.

With the original Switch’s price rising (at least here in Canada), it just makes sense to consider Android tablets — especially for kids. Sure, you can’t play Black Myth: Wukong on Android, but that’s why I have PCs ready for that. Kids? They just want to have fun and connect with friends.

    • atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOP
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      23 hours ago

      Nope. You must play a game before you call it shovelware. Anything less is just lazy, uninformed hot air.

      If you can’t be bothered to actually try what you’re criticizing, you have zero business judging it. That’s not opinion—that’s ignorance.

      So stop pretending you’re some gaming authority when all you’ve done is shout from the sidelines without ever stepping on the field.

      • nogooduser@lemmy.world
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        13 minutes ago

        If you can’t be bothered to actually try what you’re criticizing, you have zero business judging it. That’s not opinion—that’s ignorance.

        If there are 700,000 games then you must judge games without trying them. Otherwise you’d be constantly playing games to see if they’re any good and would still not get through them all.

        • atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOP
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          23 hours ago

          I don’t need to have played every game ever made. But I do own several thousand and have played thousands more.

          From that experience, I can tell you this: you never truly understand a game until you play it yourself. That’s why I don’t waste time forming opinions about games I haven’t actually tried.

          Try it sometime—it might change your perspective.

            • atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOP
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              23 hours ago

              You just told me you don’t play anything, so by your own admission, you’ve seen nothing.

                • atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOP
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                  22 hours ago

                  I read you loud and clear—I get that you don’t play mobile games because you think they’re shit.

                  And my point is simple: if you don’t play them, your opinion on them counts for exactly nothing.

                  No games played = no credibility. It’s that straightforward.