Question: How did Samuel come to like violent games??
or How Eugene learnt to worry and hate the Bomb?
It's kind of funny, because I've been running the other way recently. I never play shooters or any games anymore unless it's a good cause (eg. with friends/colleagues). For some reason, I'm come to abhor anything with any kind of violence in it, which includes wargames, news and TV. It's not hate, but rather a motivator towards the opposite direction.
And then, I realized it wasn't really violence I came to dislike, it was just its initiation without a reasonable cause or decisive victory. Or the scenarios where violence gets blown out of proportion, or when it would never work in reality.
I guess I would describe the feeling as equal to an enemy intending to win by wasting my time. It's like a kind of stalling. Or insulting my intelligence. Like when you know it's impossible in the near future and you probably don't ever want it to happen, even if it becomes possible.
Just a thought. Maybe it's a change of values and perspective of what I consider to be cool.
Yeah, it would be interesting to list what we consider cool now, and in what respect.
A post for Another Day...
Intel 6th generation CPU prices
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Currently in the process of upgrading my parents' computer.
Zoom needs Intel i5 or above to use "background removal without green
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4 years ago
1 comment:
Wow, it's like we swapped our ideals for a day :D
or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
I've started playing Mirror's Edge this weekend and my mind is simulating freerunning and rooftop jumping. Not that I can physically do it.
Don't get me wrong, I still dislike violence, abhor wars, but "violent" video games get a free pass as entertainment. Yes, I accept there is some self-contradiction in the previous statement, but emotionally I don't like wars and real-life violence, while I enjoy playing "violent" video games.
(Though how "violent" is Portal 2, Half-life 2 or Team Fortress 2 is really subjective)
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