Creepah
Career
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2014
- Messages
- 394
- Reaction score
- 542
Oh hello there!
It has been awhile, hasn't it? I haven't really had the motivation to post recently, so you can blame my recent inactivity on that. But I'm on holiday for a bit and feel like getting back in touch with the community.
So what am I on about today? Well, really it's just a ramble. General thoughts I have which I attempt to successfully transfer onto legible text. The phrase "It's just a game" tends to be used in a negative manner, generally by people reacting to others getting hyped up and often emotional over a game. However, should getting emotional, and even attached to a game be negative?
Directly, yeah. My brother is a prime example of this. He plays a whole lot of CS:GO, like many members of this community, and lets just say he takes it too far. When he loses a match, or gets killed, or someone is hacking, or someone is "hacking" (if you know what I mean), he often over reacts and shouts profanity which I can hear wearing headphones with a closed door and down the hallway, saying things I'd rather not repeat here to avoid getting an forum alert of the kind I don't want, and even banging on his desk. It's pretty annoying, and is a prime example of the correct usage of "it's just a game!".
But I've seen people apply this phrase to situations such as MCSG, or Minecraft in general. For many people here, this community of people is very important. For the members of staff, and many other dedicated players, it's a daily commitment to join the server and play with friends. For many of us, it's no longer just a game, or even no longer is the game the reason we keep coming back. I stopped seriously playing Minecraft a few months ago. Yeah, I join and play a game from time to time, get killed and leave, but not playing for more than an hour at a time on a regular basis. But for some reason, I still browse (and post on) these forums, keep up with the people and the things which are happening within the community. Why? Because it's not the game which brings me back, it's the people, as cheesy as I know that sounds.
So next time you get involved into a community centred around a game like this one, when someone says "It's just a game", tell them that frankly, it's not just a game. Because for many of us, it's more than that.
It has been awhile, hasn't it? I haven't really had the motivation to post recently, so you can blame my recent inactivity on that. But I'm on holiday for a bit and feel like getting back in touch with the community.
So what am I on about today? Well, really it's just a ramble. General thoughts I have which I attempt to successfully transfer onto legible text. The phrase "It's just a game" tends to be used in a negative manner, generally by people reacting to others getting hyped up and often emotional over a game. However, should getting emotional, and even attached to a game be negative?
Directly, yeah. My brother is a prime example of this. He plays a whole lot of CS:GO, like many members of this community, and lets just say he takes it too far. When he loses a match, or gets killed, or someone is hacking, or someone is "hacking" (if you know what I mean), he often over reacts and shouts profanity which I can hear wearing headphones with a closed door and down the hallway, saying things I'd rather not repeat here to avoid getting an forum alert of the kind I don't want, and even banging on his desk. It's pretty annoying, and is a prime example of the correct usage of "it's just a game!".
But I've seen people apply this phrase to situations such as MCSG, or Minecraft in general. For many people here, this community of people is very important. For the members of staff, and many other dedicated players, it's a daily commitment to join the server and play with friends. For many of us, it's no longer just a game, or even no longer is the game the reason we keep coming back. I stopped seriously playing Minecraft a few months ago. Yeah, I join and play a game from time to time, get killed and leave, but not playing for more than an hour at a time on a regular basis. But for some reason, I still browse (and post on) these forums, keep up with the people and the things which are happening within the community. Why? Because it's not the game which brings me back, it's the people, as cheesy as I know that sounds.
So next time you get involved into a community centred around a game like this one, when someone says "It's just a game", tell them that frankly, it's not just a game. Because for many of us, it's more than that.