The first thing anyone says in Edith Whartonâs 1924 novella âNew Yearâs Dayâ is âshe was badâŠalways.â Though nothing I do will intrigue as much as Lizzie Hazeldean appalling Whartonâs fictionalized New York high society with her affair, ârunning out of the Fifth Avenue Hotel on New Yearâs day with all those dressed-up women,â Iâve taken the simplicity of that first appalled statement to heartâI see myself as bad, always, so I usually avoid making New Yearâs resolutions.
But, you know, video games donât make me feel nearly as existential, so Iâll make an exception.
Generally, in my winding path to emotional growth, I set myself a shifting standard and accept that Iâll always fall short of my highest expectations, as humans tend to do. New Yearâs resolutionsâdeciding on major life changes mainly because itâs Januaryâusually feel like living based on whim, it can be unstable and soon unenthusiastic. I donât like boxing myself in with a new, strict exercise regime or unreasonable plan to completely invert my personality just because Iâve realized, during another ice-dusted winter, that weâre all dying.
Yeah. I get morose about winter because Iâm Slavic. But video games, offering us infinite lives and worlds to inhabit, help me take resolutions less seriously. And my main video game resolution is to use them to help me take myself less seriously, too.
Defying all logic, common sense, and the will of God, probably, I will resolve to play more online multiplayer games with random peopleâŠusing voice chat.
I know. But random people create my gaming Achilles heel. I love Dead by Daylight and fighting games like Guilty Gear Strive, but I rarely play them because I am thoroughly terrified of other people. Even without using any chat functions, I have paralyzing gamer stage frightâteabagging clips on YouTube do not help. Neither does having a very high-pitched girl voice, which, in online gaming, can frustratingly lead to gender-based harassment.
But recently, Iâve been asking myself why I care. Would a 15-year-old Warzone player giggling at me about âsandwichesâ and âthe kitchenâ really shake and crush my core like a Coke can? No, I donât think it would.
I donât want to let momentary discomfort keep me from games I have fun playing anymore, so in 2023, Iâll try to scale the wall Iâve built around multiplayers. Iâll make an effort to talk and game with weirdos online and embrace the possibility that Iâll get flustered, or make a mistake, or need to block someone.
Kotaku staff writer Zack Zwiezen told me his gaming New Yearâs resolution is the perennial one, âStop buying games you donât finish.â Staff writer Levi Winslow echoed this and added another Iâd like to steal tooââplay more indie games.â Famous fashion police officer and Kotaku senior editor Alyssa Mercante has also vowed, benevolently, to play Warzone with me and âterrorize the boys.â
More than I think about that first line of âNew Yearâs Day,â the final lines of Rainer Maria Rilkeâs poem âArchaic Torso of Apolloâ pop into my headââfor here there is no place / that does not see you. You must change your life.â Itâs so sudden and shocking, the immediacy of those lines. I thought we were talking about a statue, Rilke, and now youâre telling me I must change my life?
My desire for statuesque sameness often fights with my yearly impulse to start again. It feels like, for our whole lives, weâre chipping at stone waiting for the day its shape will start to make sense to us. It might never comeâall we have is this immovable rock. But we canât ignore the tools in our hands, either, can we?
So, tell me, do you like making New Yearâs resolutions? What are some of your video game resolutions? Does this time of year make you feel existential, too? Let me know, and have a very happy New Year.
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