On the other hand, I stopped playing Skyrim because the sheer size of my save file was quickly ruining game stability, so 100% was just a side effect of play, and I never even try with Batman games, because I know I can't succeed. Doesn't stop me from enjoying them.
I just finished a game where, after playing for two weeks for various story completion reasons, I spent another two weeks grinding a couple of stages for various kill and completion rewards for dozens of characters I never used, and didn't particularly need to, for the sake of a Platinum Trophy.
Tunaro
over 10 years ago
I wanted to spend the summer finishing the Mass Effect Trilogy. That was a year ago. Friggin' side quests, man.
I already own a copy of Final Fantasy XIV. But I afraid to start because I know when I start paying monthly fee I will feel obliged to play it a lot of times.
Also...so true. When I first started Hearthstone and we all had no idea what we were doing, and you could make a few mistakes during the game and still possibly win, I could play for hours on end.
Now I play two or three chess-brained games with my Lv40 Mage deck and go "Whoo! Time for a nap."
I hate heartstone dailys because they are pvp only -_-
And for some reason im always against some ohlookatallthoselegendaries or lookslikeimlosingbetterafkmyturns
Besides i still dont have a deck i could call somewhat sufficient -_-
Jane's my favourite character, but i guess Jo isn't fond of both her and Anne, they get the most annoying traits of personality, and are usually the ones disagreeing with Jo.
Anyways, i've always followed one rule, finish all games, 100% the epic ones.
This is why I hate Jane. I like all the other new girls, but Jane only sees gaming as a chore, plays what's "cool", and insults anything that has a focus on being fun.
I abandoned any thought of getting 100% on all the Batman games when I saw the online leaderboards. People have hacked their scores for all the events, which means there's no point in me even trying. (And they're obvious hacks, too, like having a timed event with a 0:00 score.)
The secret is not caring about 100% in the first time. If a challenge looks low hanging enough when you see it the first time, go for it. If the game is good enough that you want to play it again and again, then you start looking at the achievement list.
The most recent example of this happening to me was the Daily Hero Challenge in Dota 2. I was thinking "I need to remember to start the game and roll a new hero at exactly 5:19 pm, and I have to win a match with that hero before another 22 hours expire or I won't get as many points as possible!"
Man, I still remember my time on Fallout 3 being almost exhausting. My inner perfectionist demanded that I fucking do every quest possible with all optional objectives while still searching every home and location for loot, quests and other notable shit
First Bitches!!!,
after 6 months off from online games , i start to care about fun more than completion/item/level/Winrate/MMR/all other stuff
sometime you had to take time off to see the bigger picture