Personally, I think that, especially in an MMO, 15 hours per week is well within the realm of casual.
I agree. I’ve spent over 25 hours a week, but I’m definitely casual. I don’t think hours played is a defining characteristic of casual.
Actually, the definition of the word “casual” seems to be pretty casually-stated.
So, the word “casual” probably isn’t limited to any one definition. It’s probably more of a section of a continuum. Things like:
- Many hours vs. few hours.
- Solo vs. group-centric attitudes.
- Easy play vs. hard play.
- Structured play vs. unstructured.
and probably a lot more. Casuals would tend to be on one side of any summary of those tallies, and hardcores on the other. But, no one thing “defines” either group.
I agree. As I said before, the most defining characteristic of “casual” from my WoW experience was an unwillingness to schedule one’s life around the game. Generally, this referred to raiding, where any one individual’s schedule must align with the needs of the 9-39 other players in the group.
A corollary of that is that players who didn’t raid tended to be (mostly) solo players. And because any player that was insufficiently skilled and/or experienced with the game to raid generally didn’t raid, and was therefore likely to be a solo player, being a solo player was often associated with a lack of skill as well.
That may define the “average” casual player, but I don’t think it fits all of them. I consider myself at least somewhat casual because I dislike organized group PvE. I have only 2 raid boss kills (VG and that escort boss) and my fractal level isn’t very high either. As a result, I spend most of my time solo and I generally refuse to commit to showing up to play for group gameplay, as a rule.
On the other hand, I loved exploring the HoT maps and I can solo every hero point champion, every bandit champion (including the legendary executioner), I hit platinum rank my first season in PvP, too. And I spend quite a lot of time playing GW2. I also have 3 legendaries crafted so far and did every achievement in SAB this year.
Probably not the “average” casual, but I am a mostly solo player that won’t commit to group content on a schedule.
Now, given how many people have said, (in this topic alone) that GW2 is very casual friendly, that it’s demographic is made up mostly of what gamers from games like WoW would consider casual players, which is easy enough to believe, given how Solo Friendly GW2’s design is, couple that with how much time you have invested into it (which I am going to be bet was more then you put into WoW, since the was more appealing to you, given how much easier it is then WoW to get to the end game and be optimally equipped) that by GW2 standards you fall into the category of a Serous Player?
Not necessarily. What I’m telling you is that I don’t play the way hardcore players do. I may spend as much time playing as they do. I may have the skill to do what they do. But I’m a solo player. I do what I want to do and play when and what I want to play.
If it isn’t “meta”? So what? I didn’t play the meta in PvP. I stuck with my d/d elementalist because that’s what I like. Same with PvE. I’m not interested in jumping through hoops and committing to a scheduled raid time. So I just don’t.
To me, that’s the definition of a casual. And it’s something that I feel GW2 does a great job of encouraging. Play the way I want to play. Well, here I can do exactly that and I can do it without feeling like what I enjoy doing is some sort of afterthought to the developers. In WoW, raiding is everything. The whole PvE world is set up to funnel you toward it. Here raiding is just there for those who want it.
And since you mention it, I did my time in WoW. I played from Vanilla through BC and WotLK. I was a hardcore raider in a best-on-server guild and later led my own raiding guild where I was raid leader and played critical roles like main tank, off-tank, and raid healer. I enjoyed it at the time, but I got tired of the way it began to feel like a full-time job. That’s what I think of when I think “hardcore”, and GW2 really doesn’t have a lot of that even for those who enjoy that sort of gameplay.