kemmler3D
Master Contributor
Gaming is a GREAT counterexample to subjectivist audio. In gaming, every PC single component is benchmarked for quantitative performance, usually by multiple testers using multiple tests. There are multiple equivalents to Spinorama.org in gaming, and there have been for years. Measuring the performance of PC components has been a baseline expectation for decades.Gaming is more mainstream than audiophilia. A good gaming rig costs more than a good hifi system if you follow ASR recommendations and people spend grossly inflated prices during shortages like the GPU shortage. They also have to be updated regularly unlike a stereo.
You can find out the specific performance of a specific component with a specific game, in many cases. Which in audio would be like being able to look up which albums sound best on which speakers - objectively. What a dream.
In audio, you have people who question the entire concept of testing performance! In gaming that would be seen as unbelievably stupid, and rightly so.
So I don't think the industries have anything in common other than being based on electronics. The hobbies are comparable because of cost and (to your point) physical inactivity only.
Funny enough, I met Steve Guttenberg one time (at CES) and I asked him what his favorite headphone was. At the time, IIRC he said it was a certain model of AKG and it was mainly because it was Harman-tuned. Didn't give me woo vibes at all, at the time.Steve Guttenberg is one of the main influencers in the online 'woo' side of audiophilia.
Indeed... not sure if there's anything to it, but it does SEEM like engineers operating outside of their fields are easily trapped in extreme, silly beliefs. Supposedly a lot of suicide bombers/terrorists are engineers. At my University, there was a tenured professor of engineering who was also a prominent Holocaust denier. I guess it goes to show that engineering skill is not based on having a firm and all-encompassing grasp on the scientific method...One of the surprising issues with this is a lot of the 'woo' audiophiles are scientists and engineers.
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