Posted September 11, 2011
I have a question for the U.S. lot out there.
I think we both have in common that we associate Japanese games (as a matter of stereotyping) with cutesy platform games, animé-styled slashers and the eponymous Japanese RPG.
Stereotypically speaking, the US gaming industry as perceived by Europeans has always been associated with medieval-styled RPGs (Dungeons & Dragons mostly), military first-person shooters like CoD and RTS titles like C&C.
Of course, you could pick apart these stereotypes in an instant (not least by the fact that the Battlefield series is Swedish and neither two of the best medieval-styled RPGs of recent years is not American, but Polish and Canadian respectively) but what is the American stereotype of European games?
I think we both have in common that we associate Japanese games (as a matter of stereotyping) with cutesy platform games, animé-styled slashers and the eponymous Japanese RPG.
Stereotypically speaking, the US gaming industry as perceived by Europeans has always been associated with medieval-styled RPGs (Dungeons & Dragons mostly), military first-person shooters like CoD and RTS titles like C&C.
Of course, you could pick apart these stereotypes in an instant (not least by the fact that the Battlefield series is Swedish and neither two of the best medieval-styled RPGs of recent years is not American, but Polish and Canadian respectively) but what is the American stereotype of European games?