Some more nerdom here for my fans of that, but recently the
original Diablo was re-released and I’ve been playing it again for the
thousandth time, and it’s the first time I’ve really played it the way I wanted
to play it. I was always a warrior, but in
truth, I was a warrior in name only.
What I really was in that game was a munchkin, a derogatory term for a
powerplayer that is simply concerned with being the strongest character
possible. I would evenly balance all of
my stats, only use the best, most optimal gear, learn a whole lot of magical
spells (very unwarriorlike) and, of course, beat the game with this
strategy. …and it was so
unsatisfying. Of course I won; I did
exactly what I was SUPPOSED to do to win.
Where’s the fun in playing the game the way the game wants me to play
it? The fun is when I play it the way I
want to play it. This time around, my
warrior learn no spells, he will only level up in strength and vitality, he
will only use axes or blunt weapons and no shields: he will BE a warrior. And the game will be hard, and I will face
many challenges that were not originally intended by the developer…and I will
have fun. Because I’m playing the game
the way I want to play it.
This was the ideal I had to grow up with in 1996; nowadays, kids are trying to look like Splatoon characters
No, the blog hasn’t changed topics: this is still about
getting bigger and stronger. For one,
you can see my strength obsession still shines through in all facets of life,
but of primary importance is that this mentality is present in my training life
as well. It’s taken me a long time for
me to finally give myself permission to play the game the way I want to play it
in lifting, but in turn I am the happiest I’ve ever been with what I am. I’ve made the decision on what it is that I
prioritize, and I am training for those priorities. And don’t get me wrong; I still plan to
compete in strongman, and if not that powerlifting, or possibly even an ill-fated
return to combat sports, but I do those things because I enjoy competing, not
because my goal is to be the best at those things. My goal remains the same: to be big and
strong. And, in turn, it’s up to me to
determine WHAT that means, so that I can determine how I want to play the game.
Yes, the “re-evaluation of values”: I realize I’m not
original, but still, stay with me. I’ve
decided that the press I care about is the strict press. Benching is dandy, push presses let me move
more weight in competition, that’s all fine, but for me, my true measure of
strength is this press. And, in turn, I
train in the manner that let’s me maximize my ability to strict press,
irrespective of the fact that, unless I decided to compete in Mark Rippetoe’s “Strengthlifting”
competitions, a stronger strict press is of less value than a stronger push
press or jerk. Could I spend this effort
getting better at those things and improving my ability to win strongman
competitions? Absolutely, I could, and
then I’d be playing the game the way the game wants to be played, but NOT the
way that I want to play it. I accept
that I have created challenges that do not need to be there and have signed up
for greater hardships, but, in turn, I am far more satisfied with what I am.
Take the bench press out of powerlifting, then make lifters bench press while standing. Oh Rippetoe, only you...
It goes on of course. I
deadlift conventionally, even though everyone swears sumo carries over to the
conventional, because this is how I want to play the game. I keep myself lean enough that I enjoy how I
look, even though being heavier would help me be stronger. I use form on squats that gives the internet
cancer, my bench arch and leg drive are minimal, my programming is nonsensical,
I have no coach, etc etc: this is how I want to play the game. HOWEVER, this also means I have to acknowledge
that there is no strategy guide for the way I’ve decided to play the game. Returning to the nerdom again, some of you
folks forgot how to play a game without an FAQ, strategy guide, or hot tips
hotline (for my REAL oldschool gamers out there). Some of you hit the first puzzle in the game
and immediately start looking for youtube tutorials. Remember; we’re here to PLAY, and we’re
playing the way WE want to play, not how someone else wants to play.
And this also means to not take any offense when you go
asking for help and people tell you you’re being stupid. You ARE being stupid; at least, insofar as it
is the case when we evaluate your actions against the commonly understood
metric of winning the game. You win the
game by playing the game the way the game wants to be played, and when you
deviate from that, you are making a mistake.
THIS is the fundamental issue people make when they try to play the game
the way they want to play it; they then go out and seek the advice of people
who are playing the game differently.
People are going to rightfully tell you that you’re being stupid when
you take inefficient paths towards commonly understood goals, because they are
playing to win in accordance with the rules we commonly understand to be the
norms. If you have different norms, you
have different rules, which means you are playing a different game, and this
means you can’t get the help of other people on how to play that game.
This guy definitely has different norms
So, in turn, if you are playing the game the way you want to
play it, you need to figure out HOW you’re going to play it without the help of
others. Make your own rules, objectives,
standards, goals and limitations and abide by them so that you can be satisfied
with the game you are playing. Give
yourself the permission to play this game the way you want. When people chide you for eating the wrong
foods, training the wrong muscles, following the wrong routines, etc etc, don’t
let it dissuade you, people you are playing the game the way YOU want to play
it, and, in turn, you are accepting the responsibility for the new
hardships you will endure in your
quest. However, when the game is over
and everyone else retires with the same identical character made from a
cookie-cutter instruction manual, you can take solace in just how much you
overcame with your bizarre abomination that was never meant to make it this
far.
So many things of my past make a lot of sense now. I am going to embrace the fact that I enjoy playing the game the way I want to while having lots of fun at it even more. I never looked at it that way.
ReplyDeleteHell yeah dude: glad you got something from this. Took a long time to give myself permission.
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ReplyDeleteImI not even convinced strategy guides are optimal. Just a convention someone made and people stuck to because it was easy, and then they convince themselves it's optimal.
ReplyDeleteI played World of Warcraft when I was younger, and played a DPS warrior. That was considered the wrong path supposedly except he was actually good at raids and duels despite being all about PvE.
I see people bigger than you putting up a one rep on a log of 198lbs and here you are, with ten!
Same thing happens all the time when I play video games with my friends and they google what characters and the best and they might win but they forgot to have fun
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