The majority do indeed dictate. Casual, as I have noted before was phrased into 'people who can't be bothered'. Instead of the once familiar 'less time to play'. Yoshi echoes it with, ''we expect people to take breaks''. Certainly on the surface they can wrangle reasons why this is all fine. Yet as you correctly assert above, it is the motive/reason for their doing so that is the problem.
To have a world, such as it is a 'mini one that imitates in many ways larger systems'; dictated by the whims of those too lazy for the most primitive things - of course its a disaster.
In a very real sense, anyone who joins/partakes in virtually anything in this life - often looks for inspiration/motivation or reason to bother. Something often found in the veterans. By nature, they are always fewer in number.
In the past, looking up to people who had invested/achieved and completed things; was fine. It makes logical sense. Then the greed and self-entitlement set in. ''Why shouldn't I be instantly inline with people who have been doing this years?'' ''It shouldn't be a job'' ''I pay my sub''.
Yes you do. However you don't pay for the right to destroy a shared environment and undermine its value. Because they pay as well.
This modern mindset, is akin to a mental illness. It pays no mind to good virtues and fosters little but negative ones. Accepting things take time, is a part of their inherent worth. That has been gutted. Making things trivial. Skippable. Makes you question the point of long term mentor systems, or grind at all. Not in the sense that anyone should like those things. Rather that they only existed in the past because of peoples acceptance of certain negatives to generate pacing and investment. Scope in time played. There should be a difference between a person who has just begun and one who hasn't. Yet they are forced to fight it - because people can't accept any effort.
Laziness is a blight. Seemingly now something they consider built in. Some casuals once said to me, 'I don't want to play 24/7'. Fair enough I thought. Yet ask them why. ''Well I have a lot of other things to do. Things that demand time and dedication'.
Ah. So you accept that something of worth requires that. Yet want to render upon a game worthlessness. So that you can 'fit it in'. That is not how things should work. Imagine in real life, you worked 3 years for a degree. The guy next to you laughs. ''should have bought the skip pot mate'.
Yes. This is a game. However because people are involved many philosophical principles align with it all the same. Nobody would bother with a skilled hobby if after years of dedication they were at the same level as a day 1 beginner. Because of their investment value.
If people are too stupid to understand why dumbing down a game, results in similar - conversation is ultimately pointless.