gamesfreak64: back then the people who liked gaming with friends and have Lan parties were 'odd' people, because the 'better' people were hanging out smokings and generally doing nothing.
Anyways i always hung out at school with guys that were 2 classes lower at school (1st graders)
or with older ones, it was kinda funny that it gave more 'trouble' hanging around with same aged then with younger or much older people.
The seniors were more 'grownup' and the 1st graders were totally hooked on gaming , we had lots of fun talking.
As for social media stuff, i have a social media allergy i guess :D
I interestingly made the very same experience, no one in my class had any interest in gaming and the only one who did at least try things out would too quickly throw in the towel especially in multiplayer.
The guys from the class below were almost all gamers, either PC or console and I mostly spent time with those people if I wasn't busy with singleplayer games. And in the class above there were quite a bunch of gamers as well. People you could play Age of Empires 2 battles with for 4 hours without a break or spend an entire day in Duke 3D deathmatch. For Worms 2 multiplayer sessions, I predominantly played that game with guys from 4 classes below because they were really motivated and didn't just give up soon as the first little worm goes belly up.
I did know about every person who had any remote interest in games at my school because games were so expensive that you had to go and trade games with others if you wanted to play many titles, and the internet was still slow and uncommon. As for demographics, there were no female gamers at my school except for one who wanted to become an IT engineer but she didn't play games that much.
Fenixp: I totally agree! I didn't even need a smartphone to successfully ignore just about everybody I ever met during my life! In fact, I still don't need a smartphone to do that! I have perfected the art of being anti-social to the point of not needing a screen for achieving it. Oh sure, I've had to turn off the anti-social brain bits when I was looking for a girl, but all's good now and I can remain anti-social for the rest of my days.
drealmer7: I don't even have a smartphone! But this is the same for me, I'm extremely anti-social and only was social to meet women and now that I'm with the right one, we're completely anti-social together! We stay away from everyone: watching TV, movies, playing games, coloring, playing with our animals, making food, gardening, what else do we need other people for? Actually, we hung out with someone once this week, our first time "hanging out" in a long time, it was nice, but definitely not something we like to do very often.
@Fenixp and dreamler7, you guys are very fortunate! It's as if you flew through outer space and found another inhabited planet. A true rarity.
I don't really like the word antisocial because it sounds like it's a bad character trait to have when imho it just means you're an introvert who gets energized from doing purposeful things alone or with one person or a very small group of people and loses energy when being around crowds. Extroverts operate the other way around, they get energy -from- other people, including crowds.
I'm most clearly introverted but not afraid of crowds or individuals and not shy - otherwise painting outside in the middle of cities etc with crowds all around would be quite impossible - but I do spend 88% of my waking hours by myself (not counting work). The other 12% are spent doing contact sports which I obviously need people for and without those activities I'd probably win any "antisocial competition". It's not that I don't like people, it just drains my energy being around them so I try to only be around people when I can do something purposeful. An event like an open air concert, loud parties, clubbing? Thanks but no thanks. I don't even like to go to art receptions, including my own ones. When colleagues go out for a round of drinks I most often pass. I don't mind meeting up with people (only one or max two people at a time please) if I haven't seen them in a while ( a long while).
If it's an interesting activity like indoor climbing or something like that, I'm generally up for checking out stuff like that (unless it's too expensive which in Switzerland includes almost everything), always interested in trying something new but it's the activity that attracts me, not the fact that you're going to be around people. I don't mind going somewhere entirely by myself, that's one advantage of being an introvert. You're comfortable enough by yourself so when you join a group e.g. for foraging mushrooms in the forest or whatever, not knowing anyone isn't a big deal. In general, introverts are at a major disadvantage in society at large which is very clearly more designed around extraversion. But we do have our little advantages as well.