My brain autocorrected the typo in the image but I caught it before reading the comments, then it auto"corrected" the top comment to match the fix for the post, but this time I didn't catch it til you pointed it out.
I didn't finish the first act of baldurs gate 3 due to life removing me for a couple months and I can't get myself to come back to that save. Besides not really liking the elf bard I made. Is it worth coming and trying another class? I wanted barbarian but I want that fire demon chick on my team because she's awesome but she's also a barbarian and I heard class stacking your party is a bad idea...
Honestly this happens to me in every grand RPG. If I go more than a month without playing, I'm starting over. Too difficult to pick up where I left off what with understanding my character, my skills, the quests I was doing, etc.
I've done it multiple times with Elder Scrolls games, with Mount & Blade, and most recently with Kingdom Come: Deliverance.
Hell yeah! Each class plays pretty differently, and you can respec any of your companions to different classes by taking to Withers š I'd definitely give it another try, it's a great time sink
With menu games like Paradox make, you gotta learn by playing the game. And by playing the game, I of course mean pausing the game every minute or two to spend way more minutes reading the tooltips, the tooltips within those tooltips, and then finding your way to a new menu you didnāt know existed referenced by those tooltips so you can read more tooltips!
Itās a beautiful cycle, and Victoria 3 has sucked me in as much as Stellaris did 7 years ago. If you have any questions or thoughts, Iād love to hear them!
With menu games like Paradox make, you gotta learn by playing the game. And by playing the game, I of course mean pausing the game every minute or two to spend way more minutes reading the tooltips, the tooltips within those tooltips, and then finding your way to a new menu you didnāt know existed referenced by those tooltips so you can read more tooltips!
Itās a beautiful cycle, and Victoria 3 has sucked me in as much as Stellaris did 7 years ago. If you have any questions or thoughts, Iād love to hear them!
See, I like the skill, physical endurance or patience to properly speedrun a game.
But I will play a game on autopilot over and over again. Call it... I don't know, speedjogging a game? Speedstrutting? Power speedwalking?
In any case, there are many situations where I will gladly play through Streets of Rage in half an hour instead of barely making it through the tutorial of whatever the current epic is. I feel at peace with that.
That's Vampire Survivors for me, I've already made utterly broken characters with golden eggs, but I still keep coming back because of the fun gameplay loop.
I tend to fall back on games that have a setting and possibly a story, but have the main gameplay available as repetitive things to do.
Fighting games
Racing games that don't have a defined ending
Games like Battletech 2019 which has a story mode and also a never ending campaign mode.
Open world games like Skyrim and Grand Theft Auto, but mostly side quests and doing random non-story things.
My main reluctance for playing new games is learning new mechanics and story with all the interruptions of adulthood. I keep buying them and just planning on playing them later.