And you can be the best Wii tennis player in the world and you can't really play tennis or even have true concept on how to serve, volley or topspin a real ball......it is what it is...sorry to be the one to break it to ya
...and?
So the majority of folks play Wii tennis for fun and don't form secret Wii tennis uber clubs and run around and challenge folks to tournaments and accuse them of being skilless....
The majority of folks play Wii Tennis for fun. What makes it fun is playing against someone else; the competition.
If Wii Tennis consisted of a brick wall, on a screen, and required that you hit the ball against the wall and back to yourself, how much fun would that be?
Just like in "real life," not much fun.
However, if you have an opponent of equal or greater ability, suddenly the *point* of the game, be it on a screen or behind the local high school, is suddenly realized. You employ your best tactics against your opponent with the aim of defeating him. Win or lose, that is the fun part. If you win, you feel satisfaction. If you lose, you take something away from the experience and become that much better as a player.
In this particular case, the "club" in question has a primary aim of encouraging new and veteran players, alike, to enhance their understanding of ACM. For those who choose to learn, the result is an increased ability level. From 30,000ft, this increases the overall skill level of the player base and, by default, creates an environment better suited to achieving that key ingredient of fun; competition.
And, as we learned with your Wii example, above, that competitive spirit is what makes games like this fun - be they real or virtual.
The unfortunate difficulty associated with maintaining that sort of balanced, fair and fun gameplay is that it can be shattered very quickly by, ironically enough, a small number of players.
Since tennis is such a great example (thanks), I'll simply suggest that you imagine yourself playing a great match against a friend behind your local high school.
Youre having fun - the skill level on both sides is near equal. For every mistake, you learn something and for every success, you gain satisfaction. Its a blast.
Then, out of nowhere, two dozen hackers show up, trample your friend, lock you in the court and see fit to restart the match, from scratch, with you on one side and all 24 of them on the other.
How much fun do you think that is for either side? Is it really competition? Is anything being learned? Frankly, I'd rather be the single than a faceless drone amongst 23 others, but even being the single... how much fun is that after awhile?
Not much. Pack your gear and go try to find another good match. The hackers have taken over this court - no top spin required.
With that, of course, we rotate full circle, once more...
"...and?"