20 03, 2023

Playing Outside the Binary: 6 Things We Learned From 14,000 Transgender & Non-Binary Gamers

By |2023-03-24T12:47:15-07:00March 20th, 2023|Analytics, Video Games|22 Comments

Historically, any quantitative analysis of trans and non-binary gamers would run into the practical issue of small sample size. For example, in our own data set, we saw a stable 1-2.5% prevalence of trans and non-binary gamers in the Gamer Motivation Profile between 2015 and 2019. So even with a survey sample of 1,000 gamers [...]

15 12, 2016

7 Things We Learned About Primary Gaming Motivations From Over 250,000 Gamers

By |2016-12-15T14:11:31-08:00December 15th, 2016|Analytics, Video Games|18 Comments

In the Gamer Motivation Profile (for video games), we measure 12 distinct motivations for each gamer. One way to get a concise picture of all the data we’ve collected is to focus on primary motivations—the motivation that each gamer scores highest on and is most important to them. In this post, we’ll step through what [...]

10 02, 2016

As Gamers Age, The Appeal of Competition Drops The Most. Strategy is The Most Age-Stable Motivation.

By |2016-10-17T20:02:33-07:00February 10th, 2016|Analytics, Video Games|81 Comments

When I first started running large online surveys of gamers in the days of EverQuest, I was a 20-year-old undergrad psych major. I remember looking at the age distribution of those online gamers where about 20-30% were over the age of 30 (and a fair number above 40), and thinking to myself, wow those gamers [...]

28 08, 2015

Gender Differences in Gaming Motivations Align with Stereotypes, but Small Compared To Age Differences

By |2016-10-17T20:02:35-07:00August 28th, 2015|Analytics, Video Games|11 Comments

The following findings are based on data from 107,100 gamers who have taken the Gamer Motivation Profile since late June. Gender Differences We’ll first focus on gamers from the US (n = 51,283). The chart below plots the gender means across the 12 gaming motivations measured by the Gamer Motivation Profile. The y-axis represents z-scores [...]

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