While true, this is a category of stances that I quite enjoy poking holes into. I usually bring this up when people deride folk wisdom or trying to show how common sense is incorrect.
The basic problem with being petty is that, while you're right on one level, you're wrong on the global scale. In this case, that pixel are square or not is irrelevant. Do you look at your monitor straight on? Do you sit side-by-side with a friend playing a game? In that case, squares become trapezoid from your POV anyway. I'm going to bet you don't mind it, because our brain is very good are pretending perspective distortions don't exist.
The same apply in many domains: color correction, for example. I use to write in printing and designers would be hung up on proof to verify colors. No matters that reader would read teh final product under varying lights anyway, making precisely 'correct' colors moot.
In both cases, what is important is consistency. For prints, that all runs be the same. For monitors, well, as long as you look at a single monitor at a time, you won't notice distortion.
(In a somewhat related anecdote, the piano my parents own is and always has been out of tune. I learned on it and for me, all other pianos tones were unsufferable. What is the right pitch is mostly learned, even though musicians would like us to believe there is but a single harmonious scale.)
The basic problem with being petty is that, while you're right on one level, you're wrong on the global scale. In this case, that pixel are square or not is irrelevant. Do you look at your monitor straight on? Do you sit side-by-side with a friend playing a game? In that case, squares become trapezoid from your POV anyway. I'm going to bet you don't mind it, because our brain is very good are pretending perspective distortions don't exist.
The same apply in many domains: color correction, for example. I use to write in printing and designers would be hung up on proof to verify colors. No matters that reader would read teh final product under varying lights anyway, making precisely 'correct' colors moot.
In both cases, what is important is consistency. For prints, that all runs be the same. For monitors, well, as long as you look at a single monitor at a time, you won't notice distortion.
(In a somewhat related anecdote, the piano my parents own is and always has been out of tune. I learned on it and for me, all other pianos tones were unsufferable. What is the right pitch is mostly learned, even though musicians would like us to believe there is but a single harmonious scale.)