Hey folks! Here’s an interesting thing that happened with me: I love action RPGs, I love western RPGs, I was addicted to Skyrim. So when The Witcher 3 launched, one of the most well received open world action RPGs I loved it, right? Well… No. In fact, for some reason I can’t really understand I could never play more than 2 hours before dropping it.

I restarted that game about 5 times before, never liked it, wished I could refund it.

Until about two weeks ago I randomly decided to try it again and… oh boy, let’s just say I’m a child considering if I should sleep for work tomorrow or continue playing all through the night.

Does anybody else have a game that they couldn’t like but it suddenly clicked and now they enjoy it?

  • piece@feddit.it
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    2 years ago

    It kinda happened for me with Fallout New Vegas. I was maybe 11 and never played anything from the series. I spent my time killer hobo-ing my way through but I always felt like I was missing something, then I started reading negative opinions about it online and got influence by that, so I dropped it. After some time I played Fallout 3 after hearing people saying it was much better, I liked and I too thought it was much better than New Vegas but decided to give NV another shot (I was 12 or 13 by then). I loved it to the point where it is probably on the top of my emotional top 10. It got me into 50s/60s music, got me interested in politics and ethics, made me become a fan of science fiction and old school RPGs focused on story and a variety of approaches. Really a fantastic game.

    EDIT: wanted to add that nowadays I really can’t play FO3 without thinking that I could just play NV instead. That’s how much I love that game

    • canthidium@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      NV is by far my fav Fallout game. I think I’ve replayed it more than any other game. And I still find new stuff every playthrough.

      • piece@feddit.it
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        2 years ago

        Same here, even if tbf I almost never finish new playthroughs. I usually get lost in some side quest I never encountered, or ones I never approached that way (think about the cannibals in the strip)

  • Nomad7824@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Deus Ex. The first one. I would always get kinda lost on the second to third level and lose interest, but once I got into it, I was INTO IT! It was all I played for a long long time, although eventually I stopped at Hong Kong because it was too dark to see and I couldn’t figure out how to fix it before I lost my momentum

  • pdlrd://@terefere.eu
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    2 years ago

    Same happened for me with Deus Ex Human revolution. Back in 2012, I just didn’t understand the plot and the atmosphere of the game, and wasn’t a fan of the decision-making system. Last year, I plugged in my dusty PS3, started the game and I just had all the keys to a better understanding. Adam Jensen is a charismatic character and the scenario makes you want to go through the whole game in a row

  • deovo@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    It was the case for me with Elden ring, I couldn’t for the life of me play the game until last month.

  • Brian@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I was the same with The Witcher 3. Tried it a couple of times, but only a year after the purchase did it click. Love that game now.

  • Rule34IsAmazing@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    2 years ago

    Red dead redemption 2. Picked it up at launch, and wasn’t in the right mindset. Once I got a steamdeck, I tried it again, one of the best games ever made.

  • VizualWarrior@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    The first Dark Souls. At the time I had played Demon’s Souls, but didn’t really play games for the challenge so I was very much not used to those types of games. Was also a diehard FPS player.

    But a good friend, the same one that introduced me to Demon’s Souls, gifted me Dark Souls. It was a game a genuinely enjoyed, but couldn’t quite find my groove. I’d create a character, get to a certain point, then feel lost or too frustrated to proceed. So I’d stop playing for a few months, then pick it up again and roll a new character.

    This trend repeated for a while, and I DID progress farther every time. Eventually, I hit a wall with one of the bosses and raged quit. So fast forward to my inevitable return to the game, instead of starting over I just went right back to that boss and tried again, and again, and again… and actually won?! That was the moment I feel like my gaming potential was awakened.

    From Software fanboy, but also truly invested in a good challenge.

    Unrelated, but I’m polishing of Nioh 2 now with NG+ and the DLC

  • sjmulder@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 years ago

    Two games for me:

    Trials Fusion: I expected/wanted a fairly easy going full-speed flow type of ordeal but only the first few tracks are like that. Only when I booted it up years later to have another look did it click as a ‘skill-based momentum puzzle game’. Finished the game, loved it, got Trials Rising, Evolution and 2 SE.

    Death Stranding: got to somewhere early mid game, got bored running standard deliveries. One of my first open world games like this, I didn’t know when to move on with the story. When after a while I returned to the game and got back on track with the story it became one of my favourite games of all time.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 🏆@yiffit.net
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    2 years ago

    When I first played Dwarf Fortress, I thought it was the dumbest shit ever because it was taking so long during world gen, I thought that was the game and it was like an ASCII Progress Quest.

    Then it took some time to get used to the terrible interface it had pre-Steam version.

    Now I acknowledge it as one of the greatest games ever made.

  • StupidUselessHuman@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    Vampire Survivors. I did like it in the beginning, but I started to get bored since I got stuck in the first map. I uninstalled it for a while then I installed it again last week. I’ve been playing on and off again, since I was basically just trying to get a lot of coins. I managed to reach level 20 and unlock the second map, then yesterday, I reached 27 minutes in the second map and now I’m addicted to it lmao. I got the magic wand without cooldown on that playthrough, and it was so satisfying to see everything just dying.

    • cianmor@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Same for me too. When I first tried Vampire Survivors I died so fast and didn’t understand what the fuzz was about. I simply uninstalled it. But after seeing some videos and looking at some guides (mainly about weapon combination), I give it another chance. This time, however, it clicked after combining some weapons as seen in the videos. Quite a funny game after that experience and it made me think about giving other games or genres a try.

  • iNeedScissors67@kbin.social
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    2 years ago

    Mass Effect the very first time. Got bored on the Citadel, quit for two weeks. Went back, started over, and now it’s my favorite game of all time and I’ve beaten it 23 times.

  • RadDevon@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    I had a similar experience with The Witcher, but the first one. Bounced off the game twice. Third time was the charm. I fell in love with it and then ended up playing the other games in the series as they came out. I’m not sure what made me keep trying, but I’m glad I did.

    Long before that, when Morrowind was released, I couldn’t quite understand it. I had grown up on JRPGs, and the openness of Western RPGs was confusing. I kept trying and eventually fell in love with it too. This opened up a whole new genre for me.

    XCOM: Enemy Unknown had a similar effect for turn-based strategy games and Elden Ring for Soulsborne games. I’m still looking for the games that will open my eyes to several genres. I occasionally try games in genres I don’t typically like in hopes this will be the one. It’s really cool to have that new door opened for you.

  • SKUNK@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 years ago

    Monster Hunter. I first tried it on the wii u when I was honestly too young to really comprehend what was going on and bounced off. Years later I picked up MHGU and MH World and got basically addicted. Now I own almost all the games physically, as well as picking up a 3ds and Vita so I could play the psp and 3ds games on the go.

  • Boar@sh.itjust.works
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    2 years ago

    Stardew Valley. I pirated it because I really didn’t think I would like it, but was curious about all the positive buzz that was going on around it. Played for maybe 45 minutes and decided that it wasn’t for me. I think it was two weeks later that I picked it back up again because some article wouldn’t stop singing it’s praises. Start playing, look up, 4 hours had passed.

    So I bought the game and proceeded to put over 200 hours into it.

    Then I bought it on Switch and put like 160 hours into it.

    Then I bought it on Mobile and put like 60 hours into it.

    Never thought I’d click so well with some silly farming game.

  • Brian@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    I got Detroit: Become Human as agiftx, but have only played about 20 minutes of it. Gonna give it another try when the summer is over.