Ever have that feeling of gaming ennui? Don’t worry!
You may not know it, but ennui is something you’ve probably experienced at least once in your life, but have you ever experienced it as a gamer?
Ennui is boredom. The dictionary defines it as a “feeling of utter weariness and discontent resulting from satiety or lack of interest.” As gamers, we’ve all probably gotten bored with a game… but rare is the occasion when we’ve grown bored of actually playing games or of doing something game related.
For instance, ennui sets in for online gamers when they realize that everything they do inside the game doesn’t actually have any appreciable impact on the world around them. For console fans, it’s probably come across in the form of frustration, or simply the sudden inability to care about what happens to Link, or to your Gamerscore, or to your plans for another ultimately awesome installment of Ponies and Kittens homebrew. Well, either boredom or despair, but they tend to be the same thing in this sense.
In either case, the feeling of WANTING to play seems to disappear out the window for most of us, and it’s a shame, because there’s something missing in our play that we don’t completely understand. It’s not the purpose, because the purpose behind play is always there. It certainly isn’t the feeling of satisfaction of downing a boss with a well-timed Tatsumaki Senpuu Kyaku- Shouryuken- Hadouken combo.
In fact, no matter what reason you have for stopping, or whatever feelings you’ve got inside over your current pasttime, let me tell you something very important: it’s okay.
Yep. The world (of Warcraft) will keep running without you, and the games you love, the guilds you cherish, and the respect you pick up from the homebrew community will remain intact even if you’re not there for a little while. The important thing about games, which we sometimes forget in this day and age of trying to make games more mainstream and worthwhile, is that the worth of a game and the pasttimes we love come from the fun we derive from it.
Our suggestion: do something you haven’t done yet. Your pasttime will welcome you with open arms, and you can tell us what else you’ve been up to. In the meantime, tell us about your stories of gaming ennui. We certainly would like to know how you got past your period of gaming ennui.
You may not know it, but ennui is something you’ve probably experienced at least once in your life, but have you ever experienced it as a gamer?
Ennui is boredom. The dictionary defines it as a “feeling of utter weariness and discontent resulting from satiety or lack of interest.” As gamers, we’ve all probably gotten bored with a game… but rare is the occasion when we’ve grown bored of actually playing games or of doing something game related.
For instance, ennui sets in for online gamers when they realize that everything they do inside the game doesn’t actually have any appreciable impact on the world around them. For console fans, it’s probably come across in the form of frustration, or simply the sudden inability to care about what happens to Link, or to your Gamerscore, or to your plans for another ultimately awesome installment of Ponies and Kittens homebrew. Well, either boredom or despair, but they tend to be the same thing in this sense.
In either case, the feeling of WANTING to play seems to disappear out the window for most of us, and it’s a shame, because there’s something missing in our play that we don’t completely understand. It’s not the purpose, because the purpose behind play is always there. It certainly isn’t the feeling of satisfaction of downing a boss with a well-timed Tatsumaki Senpuu Kyaku- Shouryuken- Hadouken combo.
In fact, no matter what reason you have for stopping, or whatever feelings you’ve got inside over your current pasttime, let me tell you something very important: it’s okay.
Yep. The world (of Warcraft) will keep running without you, and the games you love, the guilds you cherish, and the respect you pick up from the homebrew community will remain intact even if you’re not there for a little while. The important thing about games, which we sometimes forget in this day and age of trying to make games more mainstream and worthwhile, is that the worth of a game and the pasttimes we love come from the fun we derive from it.
Our suggestion: do something you haven’t done yet. Your pasttime will welcome you with open arms, and you can tell us what else you’ve been up to. In the meantime, tell us about your stories of gaming ennui. We certainly would like to know how you got past your period of gaming ennui.