Sunday, February 9, 2014

The Discipline of Gaming

Tutorial, hint, walk though, cheat sheet, spoiler.

“Wax on wax off, the discipline of gaming Grasshopper.” Okay that was a reference from two different movies/shows but it seemed to fit. In my gaming entertainment over the years I have often found myself hitting the proverbial “brick wall”, especially if it was a puzzle based game. “Where is the damn key located to unlock this step?”

Struggling with clues or the strategy within a game can be frustrating. Not being able to advance means we play that scene or sequence over multiple times. I can see the Game character that we are playing, finally stop and stare at us through our monitor and scream “THE KEY IS OVER THERE DUMMY!”

This of course would creep me out so, as not to a ire the little person I am moving around in game I would look for, “Dun..dun..Duh!” the Spoiler. This of course would give me the answers I needed to advance to the next section of game-play, but was very anti-climatic. In my early days of gaming spoilers were hard to come by and I was actually glad. Now we have an abundant of spoilers for almost every game. It is too easy to cheat. A disciplined gamer will achieve their gaming goals without the need of “Spoilers”, and I have found that to be very rewarding.

Keisuke Miyagi
Keisuke Miyagi (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
 I am not the Mr Miyagi of gaming, not even close but I have learned a valuable lesson. Patience is the key. When we accomplish the hurdles that most games set for us, it means that we have fully savored and enjoyed what it had to offer.

I have spent literally weeks at a dead end trying to figure out what I needed to do and when I finally figured it out, I woke the whole house up with “Eureka, I have found it!” . ..okay, I never say eureka, but it was a scream of excitement. Several deep breaths later and as my heart settled back into my chest, all I could think of was “Damn, what a rush.” This game lasted longer than any game I had played. I felt like I truly experienced the game as it was meant to be instead of fast forwarding to the end.

Our entertainment purchase is wasted if we fast forward to their conclusions. It is like buying a movie to just fast forward to the good parts. That moment of entertainment becomes just that, a moment.


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