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This, and Apple has shown over and over they absolutely don't care about gamers. It would be very surprising this changes anytime soon.


"This, and Apple has shown over and over they absolutely don't care about gamers."

Not true. They advertize games very vocally in iOS AppStore. I know that's not what you meant, but in the largest context a "gamer" is not an enthusiast, but just a person who likes to play a game now and then.


> but in the largest context a "gamer" is not an enthusiast

In the context of Valve customers potentially willing to install Linux however, it's pretty clear what is meant.


> This, and Apple has shown over and over they absolutely don't care about gamers.

Yet gamers have similar demands (in terms of performance) to the core demographic of Apple users pre-iPhone: professionals in the 3D/animation/audio creative scene. The question is, will Apple ever think about this market again or concede victory to Windows? They haven't shown much progress the last few years, but on the other hand if there's one group which is willing to shell astronomic sums on highest end Apple equipment it's creatives.


It's a shame really, because in the past their products were actually quite popular for games, because they were also popular for game developers who were often serious personal computing enthusiasts at the time. And Bungie was a really good developer that was Mac-first right up unitl they were acquired by MS.

Now that Bungie is independent again, maybe the post-Jobs Apple could finally come to embrace gaming? Throwing thousands of dollars at completely overbuilt gaming rigs and their associated cosmetics is pretty common, you think they'd be an attractive mark for a lifestyle-brand company like Apple.


How common do you really think it is? And why would "gaming" be the lifestyle Apple wants to be associated with?


> How common do you really think it is?

Look at the sales of LED RAM.

I think Apple might want a piece of a market that's willing to overspend. They don't have to buy in to the aesthetic and culture of current "hardcore gamers", they can provide an alternative style and culture that expresses different values, like sophistication and creativity. I'm sure a lot of people would like an alternative to the Red Bull'd-up pseudo-hacker look.


Should I look at the sales of LED RAM and compare them to total game sales? I doubt that will demonstrate what you're claiming. A raw number means nothing.

> I'm sure a lot of people would like an alternative to the Red Bull'd-up pseudo-hacker look.

Are those people buying LED RAM even though it's not what they really want?




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