I very much agree with you. Though I'm curious about Skyrim, I don't have any high hopes(since they were crushed by Oblivion) but am willing to give it a shot, though it seems it has been dumbed down quite a lot. Hopefully when it comes out it will prove me wrong... or correct...
I am the part of the gaming community that has the money, yet it seems that less publishers are catering to my tastes.
This.Precisely this. It is so sad that nowadays we are getting games that sort of try to cater to everyone and fail spectacularly at being one or the other. There is no reason RPGs should be dumbed down, as seems to be the trend. RPGs have always been a tad more complex than your simple FPS, why change that? It gets really frustrating, when I read about some rpg coming out whose selling point is "all new and improved mega awesome graphics, dumbed down for your pleasure, because thinking causes cancer, the AWESOME button, and did we mention graphics?"
Most storylines in games nowadays are like something that Hollywood would produce. Streamlining for the greater good...
The problem here is that since every publisher/developer tries to expand their target audience by bringing in fans of RPGs/RTS/FPS and whatnot it actually does make them money and they have no reason to target a niche market like "hardcoe/advlt" gamers. Its just the sad truth. Though I believe that Arkane could pull it off, if Arx 2 becomes a reality.
Anywho, I'm currently in the process of replaying Arx, and am having the time of my life once again(it's my tradition to play it once a year around the winter times) poking into every dark corner looking for hidden stuff and completing everything along the way. Despite having its flaws this game is a diamond in the rough. It provides you with an unbelievably immersing atmosphere and setting, with lots of small details that just add to the enjoyment of the game. It had a nice story and an interesting concept and best of all, you could play the game ANY way you liked. And lets not forget the great spellcasting system(which is a bit buggy, but still great concept). It is a travesty not many people have played this game, and it deffinitely deserves a sequel, because Arkane can make great immersive and fun games. Not to mention they now have the Creation engine at their disposal which could be used to make a sequel more open-worlded and do their world justice with the cool snow mechanics. I'd love to travel around fortress cities.