Fun study, but n=126 seems very low to be representative in any way.
Science
Studies, research findings, and interesting tidbits from the ever-expanding scientific world.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
Be sure to also check out these other Fediverse science communities:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
Mhmm, although I can easily imagine it being representative of gamers who are interested enough in science to take part in surveys.
Speculation: It could be roughly okay to extrapolate the results to the greater NMS community, because their sample size and variety seems to mostly correlate to the age and geographic location of the gaming communities in USA, Brazil and Europe (the bulk of their respondents). Without knowing the actual numbers, I can imagine most of the NMS players sit in those three regions and with about a 2:1:1 ratio.
In the end, we asked “When you think about chemistry or listen to words like ‘chemistry’ or ‘chemicals’, is usually a good or a bad thought?”, and 87,3% of the respondents answered “Good”.
NGL I feel like this could be taken a number of ways. IDK if that was the intent of the paper or just a side effect of poor wording. Personally I think "bad thoughts" because I'm in a chemistry class but I also like the idea of chemistry so I don't know what I'd put.
I'm sad there was no "zero" option for "exasperated by the abject stupidity". I don't expect most people to know much chemistry, but you don't even need to pass middle school to understand that H2 + O does not equal NaCl.
I mean, we're talking about a simulated world, in which the reality itself is constantly glitching out. I think weird chemistry is on par with the rest of the NMS' weirdness
Oh yes, I did read that sentiment elsewhere, too, and that's pretty much the only way I can get behind the weird/nonsensical chemistry. It's just a bit unfortunate that the reveal of the simulated (and melting reality) is explained only a couple dozen hours into the story. So I feel for the (admittedly small) subset of players who wrongly learn that this is how chemistry works before being able to make the mental leap that it's possibly intentionally this weird and unrealistic.