Playing video games can be wonderful. Sometimes not playing them can be even better.
See, games are often time-devouring. Tedious. Difficult. Annoying. You might not want to spend hours of your life grinding for experience points to kill a dragon or shooting up bloody clouds of soldiers en route to some submarine. (Thereâs always a submarine.) And sometimes you donât want to activate that part of your brain that has to actually do things; you want to sit back with a latte and let your mind relax as your eyes absorb polygon-packed renders of buff space marines and gorgeous anime princesses.
So why not let someone else play for you?
Thereâs a forum on Something Awful called Letâs Play, a wonderful place where dedicated gamers devote roughly bazillions of hours to the noble task of playing games for other peoplesâ amusement, then record the experience in detailed walkthroughs. They can be video recordings, screenshot-stuffed play-by-plays, or some sort of blend of the two. And theyâre usually presented with some sort of snarky or interesting commentary for our entertainment.
Although the idea of vicarious gaming certainly didnât originate on Something Awfulâgaming play-by-plays are as much an Internet tradition as fanfiction, porn, and fanfiction pornâthe Letâs Play forum has become a nexus for those who enjoy watching other people play through games. Go ahead and flip through this archive of Letâs Play threads. There are quite a few out there. Some are smart, educational, hilarious. Almost all of them are fun to read.
In many ways theyâre even more pleasant than actually playing games.
Iâve spent quite a bit of time on that forum over the years, thumbing through Letâs Plays of games both new and old to read everything there is to read about the hidden secrets of Saga Frontier or the endless plot twists of Metal Gear Solid. When crafted and presented well, these threads are both addictive and delightful. In many ways theyâre even more pleasant than actually playing games.
âBlasphemy!â you might be screaming at your computer screen, ready to scroll down to Kinja and type something nasty before the drool can even evaporate from your bottom lip. âDo you even like video games? Get fired! Asshole!â
Back up a second there. I certainly love playing gamesâI probably wouldnât work for Kotaku if I didnâtâbut I also believe that life is short. My tolerance for tedium grows lower with every passing day. When I feel like a video game is throwing useless tasks at me in an attempt to hit that vaunted â8-10 hours of gameplayâ marketing bullet point, I just want to turn it off. Or watch someone else do that shit for me.
Hereâs an example: For the past few weeks, Iâve been playing Final Fantasy IV: The After Years, a role-playing game that is not very fun at all. (Check tomorrowâs Random Encounters for more thoughts on that abomination of a sequel.) After spending some 20 hours with Square Enixâs unpolished turd, I finally gave up and hit the Letâs Play archive just to read what would happen next. And after seeing the answer, Iâm really glad I did.
(You might be wondering why I spent 20 hours with a game I didnât enjoy playing. This is because I am crazy.)
Itâs not just the bad games that are fun to play vicariously. What if you feel like replaying a game? What if you want to experience something you havenât played in a decade but you just donât have the hours to tread ground youâve already tread? Itâs much easier to spend an evening reading someone elseâs playthrough than to spend a week firing up the old PlayStation just to see if Resident Evil is as scary as your nostalgia says it is.
What if a game isnât as awesome as you remember it? Or as awesome as other people remember it?
And, hey, what if a game isnât as awesome as you remember it? Or as awesome as other people remember it? What if you missed a classic like Deus Ex or Final Fantasy VII and youâre worried that everyone elseâs imaginations have aged much better than the actual experiences? Letâs Plays can help plug in those gaming knowledge gaps that youâve never had the time or energy to fill.
They can also teach you how to break a game. Or walk you through English versions of games that have never been released in America, in case youâre one of those people who refuses to use emulators.
https://lastchance.cc/how-to-break-final-fantasy-vi-5924518%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
I think the answer is no, but itâs a tough no. Think back to some of the games youâve played over the years: are there any youâd rather have sat down and watched with a bucket of popcorn? Or read on your iPad before bed? Wouldnât you rather have let someone else battle through all of those random encounters? Or navigate those awful water levels?
Granted, if a video gameâs quality is based on the meaningful choices it offers, youâre limiting yourself by not experiencing them on your own. But for games that put you through way too much busywork, games youâve always wanted to check out but just never had the time to try, games that donât seem rewarding enough to deserve 10-20 hours of your precious time, Letâs Plays can be a valuable alternative.
https://lastchance.cc/the-difference-between-a-good-video-game-and-a-bad-one-5924387%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E