Why Video Games Get ‘Old’ So Quickly

… and why we might finally be stepping off that treadmill

Clive Thompson
OneZero
Published in
10 min readAug 22, 2021

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In 1996, this pixelated Lara Croft was a peak of high-end graphics

Earlier this week I wrote a piece about how teenagers are rediscovering Papers, Please. It’s an amazing indie game from 2013.

In the headline — and in the text — I referred to it as an “old” game.

This made several folks cock their eyebrows. A game from 2013 is… “old”? What the hell? As the game designer Alexander King joked on Twitter…

Several other folks chimed in to point out how nutty it was to call a 2013 game “old.” Plenty of even older games, like Minecraft, are doing just fine!

But as Alexander pointed out, it’s generally true that gaming culture stale-dates things quickly. We gamers often regard titles, released barely a few years ago, as last-gen. This is kind of depressing, Alexander added, because we don’t treat other media so harshly. “We don’t characterize recent movies or books or whatever as aging so rapidly (ugh, cinema envy!).” But games live and die like mayflies. Hell, consider that we refer to games from…

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Clive Thompson
OneZero

I write 2X a week on tech, science, culture — and how those collide. Writer at NYT mag/Wired; author, “Coders”. @clive@saturation.social clive@clivethompson.net