Of course, purity tests are way more important than policy.
Using that example, it’s not like we have r/gaming2 which serves the exact same purpose as r/gaming, and has a similar size user base.
Actually there is a r/gaming2, it’s called r/games
There are also generalized gaming subreddits with a slightly different purpose like r/truegaming or r/patientgamers which aren’t about specific games or types of games, but want to focus on a different community of people.
Man, development times are getting pretty crazy at this point. Hard to believe that we are starting to see decades between sequels to titles as a normal thing in the high end of the market.
It’s no wonder more games are aiming for games-as-a-service style models.