• @espentan@lemmy.world
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    884 months ago

    This was me, skiing with my dad when I was a kid. Brand new Amiga 500 waiting in my room, along with 200 borrowed floppies, and dad wants to spend the Saturday skiing. Yay.

      • @schmidtster@lemmy.world
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        84 months ago

        It’s great that dad wanted to spend time, but could also spend time doing stuff the kid likes or wants too.

        • @RinseDrizzle@midwest.social
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          4 months ago

          As a lifelong avid gamer who’s definitely more an inside cat than an outdoors lad, I always immensely appreciate pops, gf, or the crew whenever they lovingly push me out into nature biz. Yes, the fishing trips can be boring af in the moment. Yes, I’ve wondered if camping is worth the effort. For sure, I’ve been on hikes where I fantasize about that hot new game at home.

          In the end I’m always reflecting on the time fondly.

          It’s good to be out of your comfort zone sometimes. And nearly everybody could use more fresh air these days.

          • @fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.world
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            64 months ago

            Perfectly said. As a kid I never appreciated the things my dad made me do. But as an adult I really appreciate it.

            I also think it helped me appreciate the games at home more. Once I graduated high school and spent the entire summer at home inside I got really fucking bored of my games really fast.

            • @RinseDrizzle@midwest.social
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              14 months ago

              Yeah man like, in short kids are kinda dumb and short-sighted. I also remember the urge to eat candy and drink pop till I destroyed my stomach, which is obviously a terrible idea haha

              The memories are worth way more than another day fucking off gaming.

          • @Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            Honestly it doesn’t even matter whether you liked or look back on it fondly or not. The only thing that matters is that you had the experience.

            Experiencing different things is good for people no matter whether they like it or not. The experience is valuable in itself.

          • Exocrinous
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            -14 months ago

            Valuing a memory more highly than your actual feelings is weird, but you do you. Just don’t expect everyone else to feel the same way.

            • @RinseDrizzle@midwest.social
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              14 months ago

              Games are always there, but the important people in my life are not. 🤷🏼 Life is better with a little bit of actual adventure peppered between the digital adventures.

              Just my two cents, I’m not your supe.

    • TurtlePower
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      44 months ago

      That’s just sad. I had an NES, a Gameboy, an SNES, and an N64 when they came out and I ALWAYS like doing things and getting out. My mom, granddad, and one aunt would all go skiing in the winter and bike riding in the summer, and I enjoyed every fucking minute of it. I also enjoy every fucking minute of my video games. But I knew they’d still be there when I got done having other kinds of fun.

        • TurtlePower
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          14 months ago

          I was very fortunate and extremely lucky in many ways. Like how our next-door neighbor got tickets to a local amusement park every year from his pension and since he and has wife were old farts and their kids were grown, he always gave them to us and we’d just buy extra for other family members that wanted to go along. I won’t deny I had an amazing childhood in so many ways, but that doesn’t forgive the lies and trauma.

  • @denast@lemm.ee
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    474 months ago

    I’ve used to do semi-competitive swimming as a child. Honestly one of the worst (as in boring, great for health and fixed my scoliosis) types of sport to do for an agitated child who wants to explore the world.

    For an hour and a half you do laps while staring at the tiles on the bottom of your olympic pool. Would spend the entire time memorizing every crack on the tiles as well as doing entire video game playthroughs in my head lol

  • ditty
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    304 months ago

    This was me in church every Sunday calculating how many lobsters id have to sell to buy a full set of Rune armor in RuneScape

        • @fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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          24 months ago

          Jagex has made it a pain in the ass to cancel membership now, so they finally fucked up enough to get me to quit for good.

            • @fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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              14 months ago

              When I last did it, the cancel membership button was gone, instead I had to search through support pages for 10 minutes to find I needed to go to a different page than where my membership was and remove the card from the account. The whole thing soured me to the company. Guess they changed it back. Too late for me.

  • hoxbug
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    284 months ago

    I haven’t properly played Minecraft in years but I find myself out in nature and just imagining how I would build the area up, how the house would be made, what sort of pathways I would make. Guess what I am saying is I left Minecraft a while back but it has not left me yet.

    • @Godnroc@lemmy.world
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      104 months ago

      And I can’t play it anymore because it just makes me want to start doing that to the real world.

  • @chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    254 months ago

    To be honest, I’ve done that while enjoying the activity I was doing, or at least not resenting it. I have ADHD so I know I can hyperfocus on something for too long, but I also k ow I can burn out. So I specifically stop doing things I want to keep doing because I know I’ll enjoy it more later if I do so.

    • flicker
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      124 months ago

      Stopping the hyperfocus activity before burning it out?

      Is this a power you can learn?

      • @Wolf_359@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Right?

        My ADHD is shaped like this: Hyperfocus on a new interest. Read everything about it. It’s the best thing ever. Think about it while doing other things. Then about a week or two later, I have 6% less fun when I do that thing and it’s time for a new interest.

        I’m honestly very good at many things you can learn in a week or two for this reason. I also have at least a laymen’s understanding of many, many topics. But I am an expert in nothing.

        When I’m very lucky, my interests overlap later and I can look like a pro when I “just started” this new hobby.

        Plenty of non-gaming examples but one that comes to mind is Besiege / Trailmakers. I loved Besiege deeply for about two weeks. Built everything you could build in that time. When I played Trailmakers, I was outbuilding my much smarter friend because I already had a pretty good understanding of how the gyros and logic blocks would or wouldn’t work in that type of game.

        ADHD really is the perfect example of a blessing and a curse. A superpower with an equal and opposite cost.

    • @blazeknave@lemmy.world
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      64 months ago

      Lost in the Android store looking for a game to play, not noticing my PC game has now loaded, and I no longer need a mobile game to make it through the PC game load time.

  • @FlashZordon@lemmy.world
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    204 months ago

    On Day One of a three week trip I bought Pokemon Silver the day it came out. I didn’t even bring my GameBoy with me that trip because we were going camping on Day Two.

    Longest 3 weeks of my life.

    • The Picard ManeuverOP
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      74 months ago

      I’m sure the level of excitement when you got back home and could play was indescribable.

    • @prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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      24 months ago

      Yep.

      Did a cross country trip from the east coast to the Grand Canyon in a van as a kid.

      Stopped at some old family friends who bought me StarTropics for the NES. This was day 2 or 3 of the trip. We spent the whole summer driving to the Grand Canyon and back with that cartridge in the back of the car…

    • Pooptimist
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      14 months ago

      At least back then you still had the manual to be addicted to

  • THCDenton
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    184 months ago

    Yup that was me as a kid lol. Took me a long time to just enjoy where I was at and not rush to do the thing that gave the most dopamine. Games, porn, drugs, sex… There’s always something to jonse for, but just breathing in and out where your at and relaxing where you are just doing what you’re doing is super great

    • @dgbbad@lemmy.zip
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      64 months ago

      I’m about to be 38 and this is still me. It’s rare that I can sit somewhere and not be thinking of the thing that I’m dying to get back to. Even vacations are almost always a miserable experience. Is there a trick to turning off that part of my brain? I don’t want to be anywhere but home 99% of the time.

        • @dgbbad@lemmy.zip
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          4 months ago

          Every day for years. All that did was make games less fun bc I couldn’t remember what I was doing half the time. Ended up getting addicted to MTG and smoking and playing that with my roommates every waking hour of the day any time 2 or more of us were available.

  • CALIGVLA
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    174 months ago

    Hey, I don’t cotton to people spying on my childhood!

  • @rainynight65@feddit.de
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    144 months ago

    Y’ know - if it gets the kid through the hike, there’s nothing wrong with it. (Yes, I know it’s the onion, but let’s be real).

    When I was a kid, I had my nose in books all the time. On long road trips, my parents sometimes told me to put down the book and look out the window, appreciate the landscape. I had no appreciation for landscape at that age. I do now that I’m in my mid-40s. But back then? I wanted to read my books.

    My parents loved to go on long hikes. I kept up, I sometimes struggled, I sometimes hated it. What was I looking forward to at the end of the hike? Settling down with one of my books. My reward, if you so will. I like a good hike these days, back then not so much. If I’d had video games at the time, I’d probably have fantasised about them too, if it got me through a long and (in my mind) boring hike.

    • Captain Aggravated
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      24 months ago

      I’m pretty sure I’m a 17 year old stuck in an old man dad bod, and it’s fucking amazing. People sell me booze and power tools without question.

  • @willsenior@lemm.ee
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    94 months ago

    The only thing I ever saw break my kids’ device spell was the Grand Canyon. When we walked up to it, my son was stunned and said, “Whoa, what happened?”