Tag Archives: Destiny 2

blog: Finding the Fit – 12/12/22

Have you ever heard the phrase, “throwing spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks?” Aside from being an incredibly weird idiom that people use, myself included, it’s also been the technique I’ve been using to find a game I can really stick with, except the spaghetti in this metaphor is my money and so far the wall is a garbage can that’s on fire.

For those of you who aren’t aware, I have a problem with sticking to one video game for long stretches of time. Not since the days of Player Unknown’s Battlegrounds and Overwatch can I really remember spending significant time with a game that didn’t involve me playing virtual basketball. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy playing the NBA 2K games as kind of a mindless time waster, but it’s been a good long while since I’ve really dug into anything else.

That isn’t to say that I haven’t tried though. I’ve given so many different games a shot, ranging from the underwhelming but somewhat enjoyable Gotham Knights to the eternal grind-fest that is Disney Dreamlight Valley. I took advantage of Black Friday sales and picked up the bland and lifeless reboot of Saints Row, the slick and stylish OlliOlli World, and even four different Crash Bandicoot games, all of which reminded that I never enjoyed those games when I was a kid and I have less patience for their bullshit now. Those games are fine enough but none of them held my attention for any longer than a few hours which is a shame considering that while I do have disposable income, it isn’t that disposable.

I don’t have a problem with running through countless decades of NBA history in NBA 2K23‘s MyEras mode, but eventually I’d like to do something else that doesn’t reimagine what life would be like if LeBron James was drafted by the Knicks or whatever. I have some other games on the docket that I’m eager to try, but I worry that I’m just beyond the point where a single game is going to satisfy me for that long. I’ll openly admit that I’m a very picky gamer who constantly feels like they don’t have enough time to commit to something new, but I know there’s got to be something out there that’ll appeal to my weirdly specific tastes.

But therein lies the problem: I don’t know what I’m looking for. The closest thing I can think of that might even be in the neighborhood of what I’m interested in would be something like Destiny 2, but even that is a tough putt because of how much of that game there is and how much of it I’ve missed that trying to start now seems overly daunting. Maybe I’d enjoy it, but the odds are that I’ll be overwhelmed by the lore, mechanics, and my desire to play the game “correctly” by looking up optimal builds or whatever the hell you do in Destiny 2, that I won’t actually play the game how I would have if it just came out.

I think this all boils down to my anxiety about wasting time. I don’t have as much gaming time as I used to which leads to me being overly precious about how I spend said time ultimately leading me to do nothing with it because I fear that I’ll use it on something that wasn’t worth it. So I use my time doing something I know will mildly entertain me instead of taking a chance on something new that might genuinely captivate me or leave me profoundly disappointed.

I don’t have a curative salve to apply to these particular neurosis that’ll make me suddenly understand that I actually do have plenty of time to engage in my hobbies and I don’t need to be so scared about potentially wasting time, but I’ll keep looking for one. In the meantime I just need to stop wasting all this dang spaghetti.

Coming Clean: I Will Never Play These Games

I’ve been living a lie for a very long time now.  I’ve deluded myself and maintained these misguided beliefs for years, and it’s high time I came clean and admitted the truth to myself.  There are games that I own and have installed, that I will never play.  For months and in some cases years, I’ve had these games ready to go at a moment’s notice.  Now it’s time to let go, uninstall them and let them live on eternally as painful memories of money I once had.

So here’s some of the games I’m breaking up with.

Destiny 2

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I recall playing in one of the beta phases of Destiny 2 and never playing it again.  Having a less than stellar time with its predecessor, the beta made it abundantly clear that Destiny 2 was not going to be the game for me.  Eventually it ended being one of the flagship games in a Humble Monthly offering and I installed it as soon as possible.  Nobody I knew had Destiny 2 or had any inclination of acquiring it.  Hell, I didn’t even want to actually play it, but somehow it sat on my hard drive for months.  Now it’s time I let it go and move on.

Besiege

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It feels like in order to properly enjoy Besiege I’d have to be an engineer, and that feeling was only reinforced when I’d look at some of the community creations on the Steam Workshop.  People were making functioning tanks, fire-breathing dragons, and actual Transformers while I was having trouble making a cart with wheel that could turn.  Downloading and playing with these creations is fun and all, but it’s nowhere near as engaging or satisfying as I imagine building them are.  So it’s time I was honest with myself and admit that I will never learn to be good at Besiege.

Sid Meier’s Civilization VI

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This is another Humble Monthly burden that’s been haunting my hard drive for a while.  I don’t know what line of reasoning I used to convince myself that I’d actually play this game, but it must’ve been good.  I historically do not play strategy games, especially hex-based ones, yet somehow Civilization VI has lingered on my computer for months.  I feel kind of bad for never having even attempted to get into it, but I need to face the facts and just cut this one loose.


It’s here that I’m noticing that maybe the Humble Monthly subscription is to blame for most of my lingering, delusional installs.  But that would be passing the blame, and that’s exactly what an addict would do.


Blackwake

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Last month Blackwake was one of the three early unlocks for the July Humble Monthly subscription.  In the wake of Sea of Thieves being a huge letdown for my friends and I, Blackwake was a game that we briefly looked at to get our pirating fix from.  Being the only subscriber to the service in my friend group, you can probably go ahead and fill in the blanks as to why this one never got, and never will get played.  At best, I have a passing interest in pirate-themed games, and one that relies on having multiple friends to play with is pretty much a nonstarter.  So I’m cutting this one off before it gets anymore time in my library.  Blackwake, I hardly knew you.

Undertale

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This is more of a symbolic gesture considering that Undertale basically takes up no space on my computer.  It isn’t that I had no interest in playing it, but having not played it when it first launched felt like I missed out entirely on the experience.  If you were following anything gaming related on the internet, It was kind of impossible to not learn about the cool things that Undertale was doing.  Everyone was talking about this game and how amazing it was, which is why I just felt like I needed to play it myself, but at this point I just don’t care anymore.


It feels good to finally free up some disk space on my hard drive, but it doesn’t change the fact that I could write a version of this article 300 hundred more times thanks to how much money I’ve wasted over the years on games I’ll never play.