I recently dusted off my old Guild Wars 2 account after YouTube recommend some videos of it.

I was a huge fan of Guild Wars 1, I especially loved its skill system. You had hundreds of skills available but you could only equip 8 at a time. This forced you to think carefully and craft builds, which was half the fun. There were some skills that were only available once you defeated some hard elite enemies, which was also a fun challenge.

When GW2 released I bought the game on the first week, but the skill system was very underwhelming for me. A huge part of why I loved GW1 was not there in the sequel, so I quickly stopped playing.

Around 10 years later I logged in again and created a new character. I’m aware that there were tons of changes made to the game but the very early game stayed pretty much the same (as far as I remember). However, the way I experienced it was very different.

It no longer bothered me that you only have a fraction of the skills available. I’m 10 years older than I was when I first played it and I have much less time. This means that I appreciate not having to spend days to craft a character, I can just go out and enjoy the game.

The story is also pretty good, I’ve heard that GW2 is one of the few MMOs where the early game is also as much fun as the late game, and it seems to be true. I don’t feel like I have to rush to max level to have fun.

Have you ever had a similar experience?

  • @[email protected]
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    62 years ago

    For me, it was the very first Assassin’s Creed. It was the first game I ever played, when I still had a crap pc with an AMD Radeon HD 5550, bless it’s soul. I remember playing that game for hours, and then replaying it over and over.

    Lately, I tried to pick it up again, and was hugely disappointed. The game didn’t change, I did. My standards have gone up, I got used to other games with better gameplay and replay value or something. It just wasn’t as fun as before, and I put it down without finishing it. A shame, though memories are forever.

  • Voytrekk
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    52 years ago

    I think many of the games that I played as a kid. I have no idea how I actually completed games as a kid, because I find stuff in the game that I had no idea about. The games feel much easier when I use the knowledge provided in the game as well as my experience from playing so many different games over the years. KOTOR 1 & 2 are good examples. I just put points into stuff that doesn’t matter, but now I am able to create characters that are effective and potent.

  • @ChekhovsGum
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    51 year ago

    I immediately exited Divinity: Original Sin 2 when I realised the combat was turn-based (I expected an ARPG like Diablo). Years later I gave it another go, and oh my, what a fantastic game that is!

  • @sorenant
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    2 years ago

    Fallout 1: I’m not good with isometric RPGs, the top-down view makes me feel less immersed in the game. Because of that, I didn’t feel engaged by Fallout 1 the first time I tried. I was able to enjoy it when I revisited it years later.

    Armored Core 1: I loved this game when I was a child but trying to play nowadays the lack of analog stick support makes the control really suck and I stopped playing before even finishing the first level.

    There’s probably more but I can’t remember right now.

  • HidingCat
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    42 years ago

    The thing about GW2 is that it’s a good game in its own right, but you really need to not think of it as a GW1 sequel in its game mechanics.

    Also, I actually got put off by the story in GW2, it was so very child of destiny, chosen one style. The writing for the side quests is so much better and way more interesting.

    • @KombatWombat
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      11 year ago

      Yeah it gets much better after the personal story leveling stuff. It’s an eleven year old game, and unfortunately the content that new players see first is the most dated. They originally leaned more into a more generic RPG story that just happens to be set in an mmo. Heart of Thorns is markedly better, and it just improves from there. By the time of Path of Fire, the story, characters, maps, and mechanics all feel interesting and meaningful imo.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 years ago

    For me it was probably CSGO. I started playing at like 15-16 and while I really enjoyed it, I also found it really frustrating. Some of my highest highs and lowest lows were in the game lol. I would get really mad at the game and my teammates.

    I stopped playing around 2018 and picked it back up a couple weeks ago with all the CS2 news going around and now I don’t really rage or anything. It’s just fun and when I lose I don’t really care. I think I just matured and playing it casually without caring about my rank has definitely helped.

  • @AcidOctopus
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    32 years ago

    I adore Metal Gear Solid 2 when it released (and I still do), but a few years ago when I went back to it after having not touched it for years and years, it struck me just how choppy the flow of the game is, especially at the start of the Big Shell.

    You’re constantly interrupted by cutscenes and codec calls, almost every time you go through a door, and some of those cutscenes or codecs last for a very long time.

    I don’t mind it, given the story is interesting and the script is good (in my opinion, at least), but it really stuck out to me in a way it never had before. It takes a fair while before you’re given somewhat free-reign without constant interruption (though you’re never really THAT far from another cutscene in MGS2).

  • LoFi-Enchilada
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    32 years ago

    For me it was RESIDENT EVIL: Code Veronica.

    My dad bought a Dreamcast in early 2001. I was 7 years old and long story short, he also bought Code Veronica and Maken X which both were the fuel of my nightmares back then. My English proficiency was barely enough to understand the menus and such, but I couldn’t follow the story. I could never get past the first cabin and all I remembered were the burning, pale zombies, twitching on the ground.

    Years later in my teens, I bought it when it was released for PS3 and I couldn’t get past the first half hour of gameplay due to extreme boredom. I thought it took itself too seriously and was super mediocre.

    Now, at almost 30, I downloaded it for my iPad and I’m having a blast. It’s not serious or boring AT ALL… all the contrary; it’s the goofiest, corniest RE game I’ve ever played and that’s saying a lot considering "Master of Unlocking”, “Jill Sandwich” and “boulder punching Chris” are a thing. Granted, it has a ton of annoying backtracking, but once you get to the dialogue bits, the cringyness makes all the backtracking worth it.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 years ago

    I put down Fallout 4 after doing the main quest line. I think I started to get bored and another game caught me at the time. I decided to come back to the game after seeing the Starfield stuff and it has me hooked. I’ve probably put 50 hours into it in the past two weeks. The progression is just so satisfying and there are so many interesting quests that have cool lore and jokes. I don’t think I’ve even done any DLC story segments so far except the very beginning of Far Harbor.

    FFXVI just released so… I might have to put it back down for awhile xD

  • @[email protected]
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    32 years ago

    Took me years and about 10 restarts for Dark Souls to click and I then beat 2 and 3 and DeS one after the other. I expect it’s been the same for many players.

  • I Cast Fist
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    21 year ago

    Me with Morrowind. I first played it back when Oblivion launched, but the general clunkiness and jank were very hard to swallow. I did spend some time around it, and learned about mods thanks to it, too!, but never got too far in any questline.

    Skip to a few years later (2014 or so) and I gave the game another go. The more mature me actually paid attention to stuff on screen, realized how the main story was all about this prophecy being fulfilled through several coincidences, understood the rivalry between the noble houses. Exploration was much more “magical” to me, there were so many things around and the game didn’t “beg” for you to find it (no map markers ), but it was easy to feel pulled towards “something over there”. Getting kinda lost, being where you weren’t supposed to be yet.

    That second experience made me realize why so many people still despise the direction Bethesda took with the series. I don’t blame Todd, he went for the safe route, and Oblivion and Skyrim both took right steps in making the experience fun, but Morrowind truly is something that teenage me wasn’t “ready” to fully understand.

  • Barbash
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    22 years ago

    For me it was Skyrim. The first time I played it, I focused on the main quest, finished, moved to the next thing, nothing special. Years later I reinstalled and it just clicked the way it’s supposed to. Man, that was a great time.

  • @[email protected]
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    22 years ago

    Yeah absolutely, I’ve been playing Farming Simulator since FS2013, when it came out I was 11. An 11 year old kid with ADHD doesn’t have much patience so naturally I didn’t do anything in the game properly, I just cheated my way through to get the biggest equipment I could. Now that fs22 released at the end of 2021 and I’m kind of burned out on it (just a little) I wanted to go back to how things started off for me and I’m actually enjoying the game again, playing how it was originally intended. Buying all the equipment when actually working hard for it is so much more satisfying than cheating everything in. I’m actually appreciating how simple but still really fun the game used to be, and how much work actually went into this release.

    • @alokirOP
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      12 years ago

      This was me with StarCraft 1. I was also around 11 when I first played it and didn’t even understand English properly at the time. I just cheated and killed every enemy, but it was still a lot of fun.

      I recently got the game as part of my Prime subscription and it was so engaging to manage my resources properly, thinking twice when and if I should attack and from where. Victory was much more satisfying.

  • yoda
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    22 years ago

    I’ve dusted off a number of online games, replayed them, and actually liked them more than when I was younger. One thing I really miss is server browsers, because that’s how I spent the majority of gaming when I was a kid. It’s nice when there’s a community in online gaming. Examples that come to mind are battlefield 4 and halo 3/reach.

  • Cobalt_Blu
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    21 year ago

    Big Souls series fan here. I started on the first back when barely anyone was still playing and skipped to 3 right after around the time it released.

    I wanted to go back and finish DS2 to finish the series and absolutely hated every thing about the way it played.

    Me and a buddy just finished Scholar of the First Sin about a week ago and I promised I’d just brute force it even if I didn’t like it, but its grown on me and I now consider it to have the best DLC of the series