This certainly isn't the case with everyone, but it seems like a fair amount of people, myself included at times, have gotten to where they play a game/games just to:
- Get a high k/d (for a shooter)
- Beat it for the sake of beating it (perhaps it is a classic or something; I sometimes force myself to beat games that I rented or bought just to "tough it out" and also just in case the last 25% of the game turns out to be awesome or something).
- Beat it because they have a backlog and want to get "caught up"
I certainly have a larger backlog than I would like to admit, so I can definitely sympathize with feeling like I have some sort of duty to finish these things that I have spent my money on only to have them gather "dust" (Steam games...). I can also sympathize with wanting to beat a game if you're really into the story and everything. However, it seems to me that these kind of motivations for playing games are more common these days. Perhaps it is because I am older and/or discussions about games are more widespread than the old days where you either read something in a magazine or talked to some friends in your class at school about it. These days you could spend all your time simply reading reviews and news articles, watching gameplay videos, etc. instead of actually playing a game! Maybe the other part of this, at least for people around my age, is that when you were a kid (at least for me and my friends), getting a new game was a BIG deal. You only ended up owning a 6-12 total so you played the ever-living crap out of them. Plus, when you're a kid things seem to have more replay value and it doesn't take as much to impress you (these days I'm all like: "shit, these bullet physics aren't realistic blah blah")
What do you think? Has it always been this way and ust become more noticeable now that everyone is "connected"? Or did something start to happen a few years ago to push it in this direction?
For me, I think one of the things I did that did NOT help was I read a lot of "top 10" lists for RPGs, shooters, etc., "best game of the year" lists, "all-time classics" lists, etc. and made a big list of all the games I wanted to play (did the same for books and movies too, but that's another story), as well as started rating games after I finished them. While doing so exposed me to lots of great games that I might not have played otherwise, I feel like it has, at times, pushed me more towards playing games because they are on my to-do list rather than because they are supposed to be entertaining. Personally, I guess I'll keep my list, but won't try to think of it as something I have to get done as quickly as possible or something. Instead, I'll see it as a list of things to play if I get bored or want something new to play and to be ok with the idea that I might never finish it. I'll probably be starting a spending freeze for new games though because of my backlog :-) (only exceptions might be Halo 5, MGS5 or new Batman game, but that's IT!).
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