I’ve been playing games for almost 3 decades and I’ve owned almost every Xbox, so the online factor is there and overall easily accessible but I just never got this community feel I read in some places, my most played games are probably WWE 2k14 and Tekken 7 and 8, yet I’ve never interacted with anyone, I don’t have a headset and I don’t wanna hear voice or chat while playing though, it just distracts me and I despise losing, but apparently the people connect, make friends and a few even found love while playing their favourite game.

I envy them.

Is like the only hobby I have and tbh it isolated me even more from getting any type of affection or contact.

Some people mention discord but that awful app is terrible plus people act weird there, is like the game is very secondary there and just post cringe stuff instead.

  • @[email protected]
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    218 hours ago

    IMO competitive multiplayer games aren’t great for socialization.

    I mostly play games to keep up with friends who live far away, and the best games for this IMO are things like Minecraft, but casually playing an MMO or a shooter works too. Getting too into it means you have to focus too much on the game and can be worse for socializing.

    Also idk about meeting people this way. I know people who have met online over gaming, but for me I’m mostly playing with people I already met. I will say the closest I’ve come to making online friends was on a public Minecraft server with about 30 regular players over the course of several years.

  • @[email protected]
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    432 days ago

    I honestly don’t understand how people socialise and make friends though gaming

    yet I’ve never interacted with anyone, I don’t have a headset and I don’t wanna hear voice or chat while playing though

    To be blunt, you need to interact and talk with people to form a lasting relationship. If you aren’t socialising while gaming then, well, you aren’t socialising while gaming.

    That’s fine, a perfectly valid way to play, but if you really envy them and you want to start socialising and making friends while gaming you’re gonna have to get a headset and talk with people.

    • Depending on the games you’re into, you may not even get to socialize with anyone, or you’ll have a limited time to add friends you see in a match because you’re not guaranteed to see them again.

      If you’re into FPS, there’s no community within the games anymore. It’s all random match making unless you already have friends to group up together.

      Games like Minecraft have good communities where you can play the same server and run into the same regulars often and actually get to know someone.

  • @[email protected]
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    172 days ago

    I will say, you’re complaining about community while only playing 1v1 versus games. I don’t think anyone would call WWE 2k14 or the Tekken games really “community focused,” and certainly not to the same level as games like World of Warcraft or Warframe. I’d even argue other PvP focused titles would offer better communities, as team-focused titles like Deadlock and Marvel Rivals incentivize players to seek out other players they enjoy playing with. Solo 1v1s just don’t incentivize community in the same way.

  • Tarquinn2049
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    2 days ago

    Making friends is not something that happens to you, making friends is something you do. Keeping friends also continues to take effort and intent.

    The discord groups for those games would suck. Discord is about community, those games are not. Playing more socially oriented games and joining the discords for those games would show you a completely different side of discord. But discord isn’t an important part of making friends. Just one option.

    The most important part is if you want to make friends by playing games, they need to be games that would actually lead to that.

  • @mossy_
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    2 days ago

    is like the game is very secondary there and just post cringe stuff instead

    Part of being friends with people is talking about stuff that isn’t a singular video game.

    I would say to give discord a try but it might be hard to find people your age. It also depends on the game, Tekken might not be the best for socializing. A game with a clan system might be your best bet but you’re going to have to be actively trying to meet people wherever you go

      • @[email protected]
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        31 day ago

        So it seems like you don’t like games that involve other people but are then surprised when people meet others by playing games that involve other people. Making friends requires two things:

        1. Talking to other people
        2. Sharing a connection

        You seemingly don’t want to do the first, and for the second you complain that the app is terrible and the people are weird/cringe and that the game is secondary to them.

        Just to let you know, number two in my list is about a connection. Connections are not something you talk about 100% of the time, that makes it an obsession. Obsessions are fine to have but don’t expect to make long term friends that way. Connections are what bring us together and then commonalities allow us to stay friends. The reason people are talking about things other than whatever game you’re playing is because that’s what friends do. The game is the initial connection and then talking about that and getting off topic onto other subjects forges the friendships.

        • Hossenfeffer
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          223 hours ago

          OP doesn’t want to change. This is at least the fifth post I’ve seen from him where he complains about his life and then dismisses every single piece of advice he’s given. I don’t know what he’s looking for, but it isn’t solutions.

  • @[email protected]
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    72 days ago

    The Discord experience very much depends on the people on the server that you’re on. Any medium is just enabling connections, though. The connections themselves are what matter.

    From my experience, you need to find a relatively small/niche group for deep connections to form. I’ve found several communities like that. Although, I think my experience is heavily influenced by me being neurodivergent, and finding groups of other neurodivergent people that I get along with. Like, finding groups of nerds who share the same special interests.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      hot take: when people say “The discord experience very much depends on the people on the server” (which is a common refrain) since to me it seems you can always say that about any medium with communities I just replace it with “discord sucks”

      • @[email protected]
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        1 day ago

        Sounds like the people you hang out with on discord are poor company.

        Discord does an excellent job of facilitating connections between people. If you dislike it because of the people you connect with, that’s not a Discord issue, that’s a people issue.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 hours ago

          no, it is a discord issue

          Also discord has been used for a drop in replacement for all kinds of things it is extremely poorly suited to do such as software help forums it is disengenous at this point to respond with that argument, so what if discord functions fine under ideal conditions with a group of friends?

          That is a bare minimum expectation…

  • @SpruceBringsteen
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    62 days ago

    All the friends I made gaming were on private owned servers where I was a regular. Never through matchmaking or random games.

  • @evujumenuk
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    62 days ago

    Two necessary components for friendship are extended presence and shared struggle.

    That is, you need to be around the same set of people for a non-trivial amount of time. Relationships need time to form.

    But that is not enough. Just being around people doesn’t tell you much about them, or tells them much about you. There’s no basis to bond over. You need to experience the same hardship as someone else.

    In 1v1 games, that’s surely harder but not impossible, if you’re e.g. struggling to improve yourself, or trying to succeed in spite of the game being a bit shitty. Try thinking of a shared objective. Only ever wanting to defeat others is ultimately alienating.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    I don’t make friends gaming personally, but I’m pretty sure its literally as easy as “hey, wanna stay as a group” -> “yo I’m getting off, lemme add you guys lets play again sometime” -> “yo wanna queue?” -> repeat until someone says "hey wanna just add me on discord’ -> appropriately determine further shared interests or determine you dont wanna go any further.

    But you do have to be friendly and yourself during gameplay.

  • @Copythis
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    52 days ago

    I made a friend in Garry’s Mod back in like, 2006.

    We still keep in touch! I have never seen the guy, but we basically grew up together.

  • @Takapapatapaka
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    42 days ago

    As other people said, games where you play as a team are probably more efficient at creating friendships. I met people online, met some of them irl afterwards, and some of my friends met their best friends online, mostly on LoL, Valorant, MMOs and in my case Sea of Thieves. I read on forums that tactical game like Civ, Northguard, etc., are a common place for this too.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      -12 days ago

      Yeah but I don’t like any of those games. Forcing myself isn’t a solution, if anything makes thing worse

      • Hossenfeffer
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        72 days ago

        As I’ve said before, you don’t want to change. Every time anyone offers you advice you dismiss it out of hand then post again about how terrible your life is.

        • @Lauchs
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          42 days ago

          Hundred percent. OP seems like a sympathy/pity vampire or something.

          I feel terrible, so many people are taking tine to try and help and at best get met with a “no, I don’t want that.”

          I keep waiting for them to take up my offer to find them free therapy…

      • @[email protected]
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        42 days ago

        Yeah but I don’t like any of those games.

        I mean, that’s fine, nothing wrong with that, but your question was how people socialize and make friends in games, and that’s a legitimate answer.

      • @Takapapatapaka
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        22 days ago

        You’re right, but it does not have to be one of those games specifically : there are many ways a game can be played as a team. Maybe you can try to join competitions on Tekken, which may encourage talking more than random matches, and even in some cases could be played in duo or something making it closer to a team-based game.

        You may also try different games that are not at one opposite or the other on the solo vs. team factor. For example, Rocket League lets you play solo as well as with other people (though I understand it may not be your type of game). Some fighting games like Smash Bros are the same. I’m not familiar with fighting games, so I can’t provid precise names but maybe you can find one where you can play more coop-like.

  • hendrik
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    42 days ago

    Well your experience will depend on a lot of factors. First of all, I think the XBox community isn’t a particularly nice place. If that’s what you tried, I can see how you didn’t like it.

    And it will depend on the game. Pick something that caters to your age group. If you’re playing Minecraft or Roblox on a random server, you’ll talk to a bunch of 8 year olds. They’ll talk differently to a grown-up. And if you’re 40, that might not be what you’re looking for.

    Plus the game will need some complexity and multiplayer elements. A simple racing game or a smash-em-up will have people talking about random shit. Because there isn’t really anything of substance (game-wise) to discuss.

    I’d say your best bet would be something like a MMORPG where you have to complete quests in a group, so you’ll meet the same people again and there is some group identity. Because again, if it’s just random anonymous people who will probably never see each other again… They won’t be particularly nice to each other. That’s kind of the fundamental law of the internet. And even then, it really depends on the server. You need to put in some effort to find a good one.

  • @Droggelbecher
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    22 days ago

    I don’t socialize while gaming, but my sibling found his online friend by joining public Discord servers for specific games. I think they even found some on dedicated subreddits.

  • Snot Flickerman
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    22 days ago

    People shit all over parasocial relationships, but gaming communities, especially online ones, are types of parasocial relationships.

    Getting involved is different and more aloof than getting involved in an in-person community.

    Unlike being the guy standing in the corner visibly not involved so someone can see you and say “hey come join the fun” that doesn’t happen so often online because you can have 15 people all idling nowhere near their computers only to come back to a message 16 hours later “come and join the fun” when the fun is all said and done.

  • @Lauchs
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    12 days ago

    If you envy them, you can take proactive steps like therapy. Again, if you share the region in which you live, I can look for free resources for you.