102 points

Fight with everything you got because in a few short years, sometimes months, even days or hours … those younger than you with better reflexes and a willingness to learn new things, methods and ideas will quickly become better, faster and stronger than you, you poor old ancient bastard.

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63 points

That and they have way more free time to play endless hours of that game…

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22 points

This is why we need to bring back child labor. Those little fingers could be building the electronics that go into those consoles.

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14 points

Oh don’t worry, they still are.

Just not domestically.

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3 points

They spend so much time on Minecraft and Fortnite, when they could be in the mines and the construction site.

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9 points

Kid: “Haha, 5 victory streak, grandpa!”

Me, trying not to cry: “I have nothing left to teach you.”

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37 points
*

I believe that gaming is so fundamentally different now. Twitch, YouTube and other services have produced instant access to streams of the best players in the world and thousands of players crowd sourcing all of their knowledge online in discord, comment sections, subreddits, YouTube, and wherever else…

it’s produced a phenomenon where a community for a game inevitably speed runs everything about it within like 7 days. Any new meta or piece of content can go from novel to completely documented in no time at all.

This changes the way developers think about competitive gaming and even cool story games where you might hide Easter eggs. It changes how they build the game and their choices.

The onus is on the player to actively not seek that info out in games. And in competitive shooters that is to their detriment.

I’m just an old guy yelling at clouds, but it removed some of the magic of the experience when now you just Google (game)“current meta”

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Having been playing online games since the practically the advent of them, nothing in that area has really changed. We had guides and frag videos even back in the days of Doom and even community support forums and chat rooms for MUDs and MUSHes in the real early days.

What’s really changed is that the space has grown. More people playing games means more people are also showing tips and tricks for games along with better technology allowing for better guides.

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2 points

Yes, but the size matters. And the prevalence and reach those top tier info sharers have. Now it’s not even a question of whether or not you run into people playing with that knowledge. It’s assured in every competitive game in nearly every match.

A personal example would be halo 2 jump tech. A friend of mine showed me a few videos on 2005 YouTube showcasing cool jumps on lockout and a few other maps (not super bouncing, different things).

I was able to leverage that for like the entire life of halo 2 online with people rarely ever understanding what I was doing.

Today everyone everywhere would know that because the biggest halo streamers would make it so common.

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1 point

Hang on now… at the advent of games we didn’t have an internet. Doom was the high days of gaming, but games were played more than a decade before that. If you wanted a guide you had to mail order it from a catalog. So yeah, access to information about games has changed a lot. A game like the original bard’s tale on the commodore 64 could use riddles as a part of the game because you couldn’t just go look up the answer. Can’t do that anymore.

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The advent of online multiplayer, not gaming itself.

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1 point

Yeah I’m not so sure about that. I played Bards Tale when it came out and yes of course I did a lot of my own research, etc. but that kind information still got around in the form of BBSes, magazines, AOL, CompuServe and of course word of mouth. Everyone knew the Contra code despite the lack of ubiquitous internet.

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7 points

My son just got a switch for Christmas, and his uncle leant him a bunch of games including Breath of the Wild.

Since the hype is over, we can game without spoilers. It’s really nice. I feel like I’m playing Ocarina of Time again, where we have to just use our wits rather than rely on people to figure it out for us.

Yes, I could look up how to do things, but I’ve resisted so far. It makes it a lot more fun.

So far, though, I find the puzzles pretty easy and somewhat feel like devs have watered everything down as a result of the non-thinking gaming being much more prevalent

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2 points

BotW was such a a good game. I had to get used to using and destroying my weapons. I always ended up ‘saving’ them for monster that I didn’t really need them for.

That’s how I played Hollow Knight and it was awesome. Just exploring and taking my time. It was nice. I did it again with Disco Elysium. I would suggest you check out those 2 games. Hollow Knight is better for kids as you don’t have to read a bunch. One tip about HK is you can down slash on enemies and spikes.

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2 points

Thanks for the recommendations! HK is on my radar because I only hear good things

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2 points

I also was last to BotW. I had it and then didn’t play it for 3+ years, maybe 5. I think I received it before my son was born. I finished it before he turned 6.

Anyway, I enjoyed it, but it was less about figuring stuff out and more about the adventure. I did enjoy the puzzles in the area-based dungeons and a few of the shrines. I nearly always forgot about one of the abilities.

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2 points

I’m considering the expansion pack subscription just so I can catch up on all the Zeldas I missed in my 20s. There’s a lot of good games there I need to play

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1 point
*

I sincerely hope you’re smarter now than when you played ocarina :p

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3 points

This reminds me of ARMS, a fighting game by Nintendo (they tried to launch a new IP).
A couple of months after the game came out the best player of the game got crushed at an event … by a developer of the game.

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2 points

Huh, that’s neat.

I found a video of it: https://youtu.be/lYs6Bwt0e7o

If i understand it correctly the dev is the/a producer of the game and the other player just won a championship.

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3 points

I feel the same about this. For me, It kills the best aspect of games, the playful learning. You just can’t go into any competitive game today without reading meta or you get crushed. But this is my free time. I want to spend it like that and just be creative and find my own solution to problems and still stand a realistic chance without having to have a second job studying the games meta. It’s the try and error discovery that made games fun for me and the feeling when you found your unique way to do things and others couldn’t counter it easily. But today it’s just about mastering a technique somebody else showed you.

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2 points

You’re exactly right. The playful learning. It’s so bad now that sometimes just knowing you haven’t googled the most optimal way to play can linger in your head and ruin the experience lmao

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1 point

Having separate queues for competitive matches and casual matches is the best thing to happen in gaming.

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2 points

I’ve found that meta isn’t usually what’s best anyway, meta is usually some combination of good and easy to use/pull off.

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2 points

Some metas feel like they are caused by content creators hyping something up because they had some good games with that setup.

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That’s because what’s “meta” is more about popularity in games that are actually well balanced. Everyone may be using X because it’s easy to do well with; but if X is weak to Y and everyone is playing as X, you would likely do better with Y since X is weak to it.

I want to know what a majority of people are using not so I can use it myself; but so I can find the best way to defeat it. To me, that’s what “playing the meta” is supposed to mean; thinking about what the other player is gonna do, so I can avoid it/anticipate it and work around it.

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48 points

Oh this takes me back. Early 2000s, a pre-holiday release of one of the Gears of War - I forget which, and then: Christmas Morning.

Thousands of people having just opened the game immediately jumping into multiplayer and getting absolutely massacred. What an amazing Christmas present.

Now I’m the fodder, on a good day.

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15 points

Playing marvel rivals is this for me. I just fixed my nephew’s PC for him. To test for overheating I opened up his account to run a dozen games. His MMR is so high I’m getting disinfected like a pesky germ. I ruined his KDA, but at least he’s not complaining because he can still rely on me for tech support.

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9 points

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24 points

Damn. That took a turn. It will be done.

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