Dashe: I figure PC technology will just keep on progressing to get more powerful and more portable without losing backwards compatibility. If I can't run Witcher 2 now, I'll be able to do it in 5-10 years, especially at the rate I'm going with this. :P
Very true, you can now play stuff on a $90 tablet that required a $6000 PC 15 years ago.
Maybe I should redeem all those free games, seeing as I might change gaming tastes in the future and the next cheap laptop I get might be able to run Witcher 2 with no problems.
genkicolleen: Why yes, yes it is! I am a happy addict! lol~ Of course it could be because my whole outlook on life is optimistic, but I'm not sure that's it ;D
You're definitely included in the "people who seem to be so free of evil that it's weird" group I mentioned above :)
genkicolleen: Every time I get a new game, I feel soooo happy, especially if it's one I've
really been wanting. More than once I've literally done a happy dance after getting blindsided by a gift. Getting games (or anything, really!) at the very best price possible makes me really happy, too. Part of that is necessity, and the other part is my thrifty nature. I do the very best I can to support my family (hubby is disabled and the kids are both autistic,) and every dime I save goes towards that goal.
If all the participants from giveaways were like that, making giveaways would be even more fun than it already is.
I know a bit about your RL situation since you've mentioned it before and considering you've got quite a lot on your plate with the family and all it's even more impressive that you're so unrelentingly positive all the time. Makes me really want to shut up every time I feel like complaining, seeing as I have no other responsibilities than 'ol me to take care of.
genkicolleen: Reflecting upon this topic brings up something I already knew about myself -- for I like to know what makes me tick -- and I wonder if it's the same for anyone else: I love doing anything creative. Taking pictures, scrapbooking, crochet, sewing, cooking, drawing, computer graphics, sandbox-type building... but I can only concentrate on one at a time.
...
Crochet, knitting & sewing are awesome and underrated (and extremely useful), wish I had learned this stuff as a kid. Unfortunately, I grew up in a somewhat backwards town where the boys learned woodworking - which I'm not particularly good at - and the girls learned the knitting/sewing/crochet stuff. We only switched classes during one week where the roles got reversed but that wasn't enough. The boys were supposed to machine-sew a cap and I couldn't even do it without a lot of help form the teacher. Need more time to learn that complicated stuff! On a different occasion, we learned how to make those little friendship bracelets which is really fun, it's like creating pixel art or solving a puzzle game. You feel as if you were making something as cool as the magnificent Bayeux Tapestry, even though it's only a little bracelet. Very addictive, but I only managed to make one bracelet. For myself... :D Fortunately, my friends wouldn't expect me to give them bracelets, it would have taken me years and not because of the number of friends but because I'm so slow.
And then in middle school, the girls learned to cook and us guys attended chemistry class. The girl later had chemistry class as well in a later year but the guys never learned to cook. Ultimately, I used my basic chemistry knowledge to learn how to cook, using principles rather than recipes. I've been cooking my own meals since I turned 20 and I'm still alive so it kinda works but I still wish they hadn't done that stupid gender segregation nonsense for those classes. Because even though I know how to cook, I still can't repair my socks and have to throw them away whenever they get holes that grow too big. Never had the motivation/energy to learn the stitching/sewing etc stuff myself, classes would have helped a lot!
And It's true, one can only concentrate one one thing at a time. I know people who try to do everything at the same time and that usually doesn't result in much. One can easily identify those people because they introduce themselves to you in that way "I'm a spiritual-anarchist-maoist-artisan-artist-poet-producer-DJ-etc-etc-BS-more BS". Over the course of a lifetime, one can do and enjoy a lot of things well but to bring even one thing worthy of pursuing above casual level takes very much, and to even remotely master a single thing takes an entire lifetime.
Often, we even have to sacrifice one thing for the sake of another thing. I used to play the classical guitar a lot, ever since I was 10 years old. A couple years ago, I gave up on it and haven't touched my guitar since. After many many years, the EXP needed to level up to the next level becomes exponentially larger, in the case of playing guitar it just doesn't cut it practicing for only 1-2 hours a day, you just can't progress any further unless you take it to several hours per day. Plus, I can't have long fingernails (needed for playing) on my right hand as that would interfere with sports I'm doing and risk injury to others.
genkicolleen: The casual games scene can only hold your interest for so long, though, as the stories start getting repetitive and uninspiring after a while. That's when I finally started playing some of my Good Old Games, the true adventures (as opposed to the adventure-lites available in the casual games circle.) It was only a few months after I started playing these that I discovered the GOG forums, thanks to the Pot of Gold promo last March.
We all know what happened then :p A wild genki appeared? :O
I've never played any of the casual HOG adventures over on Steam etc though some have caught my attention (Drawn The Painted Tower e.g., looks pretty amazing form an artistic point of view).
Currently, I'm enjoying Lost Horizon, a casual adventure compared to more challenging classics but it's still an adventure game proper so there are games that fall in between the uninspired games you refer to and classic "real" adventures. I too often get completely stuck in those real adventures and then I don't even have fun and put the entire game on hold. Who likes to feel stupid for not progressing in a game? No one, I'm certain. Sometimes, I really dislike the entire genre for making me feel like the unseen third guy in the Dumb and Dumber duo, or trio in that case: The guy who stupidly gets stuck in adventure games. I want escapism, not frustrationism :/
genkicolleen: So, for those who didn't feel like reading the wall of text, my point is that I can only focus myself on one interest at a time, and I wonder if anyone else does the same. :)
Yes, I have occasionally tried to multitask but then I remember how as a kid, I was more focused and efficient and professional about interests, always going through phases that often lasted for many weeks. Dinosaurs, LEGO, building blocks, bird watching, Egyptian hieroglyphs, always one thing! Except of course drawing which I always did but I don't count that as an interest but as a permanent vocation, often used to express an interest.