Postby ClosetOtaku » Fri Aug 27, 2004 10:06 pm
I guess it depends on whose standards you are using to judge "immature".
I've not called myself ClosetOtaku for nothing. Most adults would not understand my interest in anime; one of my adult friends once asked, "Is this something that grown men should be interested in?" Then he watched a couple episodes of Cowboy Bebop and Azumanga Daioh (he's a teacher) and enjoyed them. He's not an otaku now by any stretch, but I don't think he has as many objections as he did.
That said... I've asked the question on other forums why there don't seem to be a whole lot of us older people out there. When I was at Otakon, just about everyone seemed High School/College age, with maybe a total of six people my age there all weekend (not counting the numerous adults who were being dragged in tow by their children).
I think the reasons for it are many: anime takes a lot of time to watch and enjoy. Try raising a family, participating in church, paying a mortgage, keeping in shape, etc. and all of your "free" time is gone. You have to choose carefully, and anime is not one of those things that you can pull in a bunch of friends and say, "let's watch this!". Most would rather play Pictionary. :: shudder ::
So... is it immature? I liked the earlier comment that most anime was more mature and thought-provoking than (fill-in-the-blank 'adult' entertainment); it certainly beats out what passes for quality stuff on Network TV. Not a lot of people understand it, and it's easy to label "for kids". Maybe it is not so much that it is immature, rather it is stereotyped negatively because so few older adults participate.
As for video games: according to a recent industry survey, the average age of gamers is about 30, so I don't think you have the immaturity factor there. A lot of adults my age play Fantasy Football and other such non-PC amusements, so that seems more a matter of taste.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis