Posted January 08, 2012
Ah, indecisiveness... I have a terrible habit of playing a game most of the way through, then something (boredom, IRL events, hardware problems) inevitably keeps me away from it so long that I feel I owe it to myself to start all over so the story would be fresh.
I have restarted a handfull of RPGs half a dozen times since the early 90's (I swear I will someday beat at least one of the Final Fantasy games). I recently completed the last ~10% of The Dig - after not touching it for 3 months or so. It didn't feel good; I remembered the main plot points, but I'd forgotten all the intricacies of how I beat the puzzles and how I ended up where I was, and that really detracted from the feeling of accomplishment.
Once I tried making a cardboard die (i.e. dice, singular form), with the names of games I desired to complete written on it. This approach did not work at all! Invariably whatever game came up did not "fit my mood" at that moment.
What I do now is similar to downloadmunkey's method - I have roughly a dozen games installed, making sure only one or two are... I suppose "story-driven" would be a good description. The others are faster-paced games I can sit down and beat a level or a round if I don't feel like getting into the former, whether they be a fighting/racing game, puzzler, or other random indie games. I'm most of the way through Cave Story right now, so we'll see how it turns out.
I have restarted a handfull of RPGs half a dozen times since the early 90's (I swear I will someday beat at least one of the Final Fantasy games). I recently completed the last ~10% of The Dig - after not touching it for 3 months or so. It didn't feel good; I remembered the main plot points, but I'd forgotten all the intricacies of how I beat the puzzles and how I ended up where I was, and that really detracted from the feeling of accomplishment.
Once I tried making a cardboard die (i.e. dice, singular form), with the names of games I desired to complete written on it. This approach did not work at all! Invariably whatever game came up did not "fit my mood" at that moment.
What I do now is similar to downloadmunkey's method - I have roughly a dozen games installed, making sure only one or two are... I suppose "story-driven" would be a good description. The others are faster-paced games I can sit down and beat a level or a round if I don't feel like getting into the former, whether they be a fighting/racing game, puzzler, or other random indie games. I'm most of the way through Cave Story right now, so we'll see how it turns out.