It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
This week's One Good Roll was inspired by a now deleted post Steven happened upon on the MMORPG Reddit over the past week. He poses the question, If someone were to ask you to weigh your experiences with MMORPG's, how would you perceive gaming has impacted your life?
Comments
Here is just a couple of things. They taught me how to handle groups of people using incredibly basic text communications, anything else I have used since then was a doddle. They introduced me to new friends in real life meetups.
I wonder if anyone here has had any truly positive experience from MMORPGs in the past few years. I wonder if there's anyone under 25 here whose life has somehow been transformed by an MMORPG. (Are there even people here who are under 25?)
Proud MMORPG.com member since March 2004! Make PvE GREAT Again!
In a group in the game you need the others so you're forced to tolerate and practice patience. This does not come naturally. It requires practice and patience.
Communication is the other skill. I know a lot of people who lack this skill where speech is required but excel in giving text directions. They also improve languages. I personally know of people who have confessed to learning English through MMORPGs.
What a great medium huh?
거북이는 목을 내밀 때 안 움직입니다
Also kept me from pursuing a career as a high level financial executive and corporate raider which I could easily have seen myself doing.
Happy that I was able to keep my soul.
"True friends stab you in the front." | Oscar Wilde
"I need to finish" - Christian Wolff: The Accountant
Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm
Fools find no pleasure in understanding but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV
Don't just play games, inhabit virtual worlds™
"This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon
Thee gameplay and features are just no longer my cup-of-tea sadly.
No more does it make me feel like an adventurer on a journey. Now I feel like a participant in a casino rave waiting for it to burn down.
Logic, my dear, merely enables one to be wrong with great authority.
1) Touch-typing / speed typing. Before MMOs, I could write quicker than I could type, but since MMOs it's been the reverse. and it's a skill that doesn't seem to fade, despite not really playing mmos much over the last 9 years.
2) Leadership skills. Approximately 5 years of running an online guild through 3 different games, starting at age 22. Being responsible for 100+ active gamers at that age gave me experience I wouldnt have gotten in real life, and thus helped get me promotions irl.
3) Communication skills. Leading raids comprised of men, women and children with a wide variety of ages, skill levels and languages.....yeh, u have to get good at explaining stuff. Working as a developer, this came in handy as I was usually the only one in the company who could convert "regular" (dumbass) words into technical language, and vice versa. When I started helping out our sales team, this ability dramatically improved our sales rates.....not that i got any sort of commission, ungrateful bastards!
4) Familiarity with percentages. Humans are generally shit when it comes to statistics, we have no natural feel for them and what we do have gets warped by hope or pessimism. But soooooo many years of crit chance, multiplayers, block/parry/evade, you finally get an appreciation for how those abstract numbers "feel".
5) Problem solving / critical thinking. Games are nothing but problems waiting for you to solve, and hopefully u learn something in the solving. Sadly, the majority of games are so shallow and simple that there isn't much to solve or learn, because i solved and learned those lessons 20+ years ago. But occasionally, a game comes along that pushes those boundaries. LotRO and its deep combat mechanics was one such game, encouraging creative thinking in a way no other game has ever done for me. It taught me that just because a solution exists, doesn't mean its the best solution or the only solution, or even the right solution for u and your friends. Keep exploring all the options, get creative in your thinking. This has definitely helped me as a project manager IRL and helped me seem wiser than I really am.
I've skipped over social benefits, girlfriends and that sort of stuff because thats already been covered by others.
I will also say that the five different skillsets I listed above may well have come about anyway, there is no way of knowing. As a programmer / software engineer, chances are i would have ended up touch typing eventually.......but MMOs made me get there quicker! I would have probably gotten leadership skills through work, but I would have likely had to wait 5 or 10 years to get there.
For example:
1) Racing Car Driver
I have memorised many tracks layouts, raced at incredible speeds in very fast cars, learned all about racing lines, drafting, late braking and all that. But apart from a bit of karting as a child, I've never raced a car. One day.....
2) Shooting stuff
I've never been in the military, a criminal gang, and guns are mostly illegal here in the UK. But I've shot enough guns in games to learn about the effect of gravity on projectiles, how far to lead a target when aiming. I took up clay pidgeon shooting for a year and those skills gave me a massive advantage compared to other beginners.
3) Flying Space Ships
Playing Elite: Dangerous without flight assists is hard! Learning how to control a ship when there's no gravity and no resistence takes a lot of skill, admittedly im not that great at it either. But, should the day arrive in my lifetime when space travel becomes accessible....I'll be winning!
4) How to survive an apocolypse
Should the day ever arrive that there is an apocolypse, and should I survive judgement day, I like to think I'll have an advantage over non-gamers. I've learned what to prioritise, what to avoid etc. Plus, I know that if I need to build myself some shelter, I can just punch a tree enough times to get some wooden planks to build a cabin! I mean, what non-gamer would ever think about punching trees to get wood? Idiots, the lot of them!