LOL, please please, stop with the space hogging quote pasting hermit, we all know you're obsessing over just the words rather than their collective meaning.
I'm addressing both. The quote feature helps show which point I am responding to. When you don't, it makes it look like you're avoiding my points. It also helps space out my posts and make them more readable, as opposed to your contextless walls of text.
Your logic makes no sense,
See, here's the problem with you not using the quote feature. I have absolutely no idea what "logic" you are criticizing here. How can I respond to criticism if I don't even know what you're criticizing?
and for someone whom insists on pasting every word he responds to you've yet to post one source of your claimed "scholarly research" on the subject of piracy
First of all, you didn't ask for one. Secondly, the message board format isn't exactly ideal for publishing research papers.
The net is riddled with studies funded by biased groups.
The ESA does this kind of research fulltime. They have no cause to be biased. The gaming industry makes business decisions based on their research. Biased research would make for bad business decisions. It's in the industry's best interests for their research to be as accurate as possible.
the best source of info on gaming practices is still from the horse's mouth, the consumer of said games
That would depend on what you mean by "the consumer." There's more than one of them you know. Assuming you know this, it makes your statement rather vague.
I prefer not to trash talk all gaming kids living at home to the point of making them think they have to post pics of the games they've purchased just to prove themsleves consumers.
Sure, and I prefer not to slander game devs.
First off, having a $300 video card doesn't automatically mean the one whom owns it has an income. Lots of younger gamers buy them on allowances, get them as gifts, or take odd temp jobs in the summer.
Allowances and summer jobs count as income too in the sense that one can purchase games with it. As for gifts, it wouldn't make much sense to give a youngster a new video card as a gift if he had no means of getting the games, would it?
The person you responded to Mesh implied the expense of games is not easily affordable, to whom you gave the example of a $300 video card,
In that case, it was my $300 video card example that refuted the person. Not the other way around.
it was also argued by Da Fox besides myself:
Contradicting != refuting.
And there is nothing erroneous about my $300 TV/monthly cable analogy.
Except for that it ignores the possibility of buying games "every now and then" as if games absolutely had to be a dedicated expense. That's pretty erroneous.
You think since you are one person amongst many here, whom have shaped this thread accordingly given the subject matter btw, are somehow saying pointless things because they see the collective meaning behind Cliffy's words rather than using the rhetorical dodging a lawyer or politician would in excusing it.
Replace "collective meaning" with "misleading headlines" and you're not totally off. Though I don't really see what the first part of that statement has to do with anything.
Labels can be applied directly or via implication, you do know what an implication is don't you?
Yeah. I've said many times in this thread what the actual implication is, and explained why it's that as opposed to "all high-end gamers are pirates."
No matter how slick the talk though, the public is quick to see what the REAL blunders are.
The public are sheep. They'll see blunders wherever they are told to, and ignore blunders where they are told there aren't any. You give them way more credit than they are due.
You don't mention though like many others have that the PC gamers are the one's Epic made their empire with.
Was I supposed to? I don't disagree with this statement, nor do I believe it is at odds with any of my points, nor do I believe it requires my personal reiteration in order to hold ground.
I could add that your use of the word abandoning implies total disregard for rather than using the word leaving for instance, but I'm quite sure you would somehow dodge that with rhetoric too.
I honestly don't care whether my choice of the word "abandoning" implies "total disregard" or not. The implication that I was aiming for was a sense of necessity, like one would abandon a sinking ship.
I don't mangle metaphors, and I've used them here quite appropriately.
AFAIK, you can't swim upstream in a sea. Just a river. That's all I meant by mangling metaphors.
You end by needlessly repeating the same thing you've said over and over, that Clify's words were not a direct accusation.
I'll tell you what. You stop saying over and over again that they were a direct accusation and I'll stop saying over and over again that they weren't. But no fair alluding to that with stuff like "he was disrespectful" or "the collective meaning of his words" either.