this post was submitted on 02 Feb 2024
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This is a common logical fallacy known as "argumentum ad populum" (appeal to popularity). You equate the popularity of the idea as a basis for determining its validity.
Compare, "if cars are so great, why is everyone still riding horses?"
But it actually makes sense with technology. If you need help, you want there to be a large community and corpus of knowledge to draw from.
Not really. In fact technology is often a great example of good demand but little effort put in to meet it. Open source software is riddled with issues that people are too eager enough to report but not eager enough to fix for everyone . We have an example of Palworld finally filling a niche described in the market for almost 2 decades.
Cassette Beasts? TemTem? Digimon? Saying no attempts to fill it were made is disgenuine
Should have been more clear, I'm talking about a 3D open world Pokemon. So the closest one to that is Digimon, which doesn't have captures. It took until Pokémon themselves created a poor version of what people asked for in this instance for another one to appear.
oh I was never really desiring 3D pokémon in the first place so I suppose that coincides with my misunderstanding