Leaving WoW behind... - Page 2
Blogs > Lysenko |
Johnnybb
Denmark486 Posts
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Archvil3
Denmark989 Posts
Quitting WoW is going to make you feel a lot more free even if you spend the same amount of time by the computer. The fact that you can just shut it down whenever you feel like it is such a relief. | ||
Slaughter
United States20250 Posts
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Slaughter
United States20250 Posts
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Torenhire
United States11681 Posts
I will say though, that WoW was a great way to find some fucking awesome people. People I met years ago in my Vanilla days...levelling up my awesome level 20 paladin and just bumping into some guys that were on the same group quest I was on...I still chat with them on a daily basis. Hell, I met my girlfriend via a guild get together (we agreed that if it was all there at the meet up, we'd get serious) and despite having some issues recently - totally not WoW related at all, so don't go there. - I have met probably some of the best friends I've made on that game over the years. The nice thing about quitting WoW is like...holy shit the day feels like it goes by so much slower. I feel way more productive, I feel like I am doing more things, able to enjoy more things...with WoW you end up with tunnel vision. Wake up - work/school - WoW - Sleep - Repeat. Now it's like Wake up - Work - Do whatever the hell I want for hours on end - Sleep. It just feels so free. I don't like to pressure people to leave WoW - I won't make my girlfriend stop, but I think as long as you don't...like, if you don't find anything to fill your time with, and you just sit around and thing about being on WoW, you're gonna get sucked back in. Find some new hobbies to fill in your time instead of WoW and you'll not go back and your life will be alot better in the long run. :D | ||
Bajadulce
United States322 Posts
On March 25 2011 04:32 Lysenko wrote:...meaning 8304 hours, or about four full-time work years. wow! I never played WOW and probably missed out on some fun experiences, but those #'s scare me. Sounds like an addicting game. I imagine you're a "normal" WOW player too? Meaning the amount of time you spent playing is pretty common? | ||
Torenhire
United States11681 Posts
On March 25 2011 09:48 Bajadulce wrote: wow! I never played WOW and probably missed out on some fun experiences, but those #'s scare me. Sounds like an addicting game. I imagine you're a "normal" WOW player too? Meaning the amount of time you spent playing is pretty common? Dude, that's nothing. Hahaha. | ||
shawster
Canada2485 Posts
On March 25 2011 09:37 Torenhire wrote: I'm so much happier off WoW. I quit a year and some change ago, after playing since release. I will say though, that WoW was a great way to find some fucking awesome people. People I met years ago in my Vanilla days...levelling up my awesome level 20 paladin and just bumping into some guys that were on the same group quest I was on...I still chat with them on a daily basis. Hell, I met my girlfriend via a guild get together (we agreed that if it was all there at the meet up, we'd get serious) and despite having some issues recently - totally not WoW related at all, so don't go there. - I have met probably some of the best friends I've made on that game over the years. The nice thing about quitting WoW is like...holy shit the day feels like it goes by so much slower. I feel way more productive, I feel like I am doing more things, able to enjoy more things...with WoW you end up with tunnel vision. Wake up - work/school - WoW - Sleep - Repeat. Now it's like Wake up - Work - Do whatever the hell I want for hours on end - Sleep. It just feels so free. I don't like to pressure people to leave WoW - I won't make my girlfriend stop, but I think as long as you don't...like, if you don't find anything to fill your time with, and you just sit around and thing about being on WoW, you're gonna get sucked back in. Find some new hobbies to fill in your time instead of WoW and you'll not go back and your life will be alot better in the long run. :D this is what is fucking me up right now, the last paragraph specifically i enjoyed wake up - school - wow - repeat. i quit wow because i got bored, and after i quit the day feels slow. i'm just browsing tl all day instead of playing wow. i think i'm one of the only people in the world that quit wow because it got boring and not out of frustration or because it was taking over my life. when i quit wow i was like FUCK i quit wow, now i have nothing to do. i'm so unmotivated when it comes to personal hobbies/things i want to spend my time on when i'm alone. you're going to have to beat me up if you want me to actually accomplish something on my spare time. if it doesn't reward me soon then i just won't do it lol, that's basically why I don't work out and read and learn something/pursue a hobby. | ||
JMave
Singapore1802 Posts
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Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
On March 25 2011 09:37 Slaughter wrote: Side note, isn't the direction that Blizz is taking WoW more directed at raiding NOT taking as much time? When you see PUG groups forming at pretty regular intervals for raids I would think it really doesn't take much time (as compared to vanilla). Prep time outside of raids is much, much less. However, raiding itself requires a commitment. Typically, the guild I was in would spend about three hours a night, a few nights a week, on progression raiding, but the thing is that spending that amount of time in the game keeps people focused on all the other things they want to achieve, so people log on for plenty of extra hours as well. The time commitment isn't really comparable to vanilla raiding, though. | ||
Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
On March 25 2011 09:48 Bajadulce wrote: wow! I never played WOW and probably missed out on some fun experiences, but those #'s scare me. Sounds like an addicting game. I imagine you're a "normal" WOW player too? Meaning the amount of time you spent playing is pretty common? Honestly it was probably at the high end. I started playing in 2006 a couple months before I had an eight-month break from work. (I'd planned to take a few months off, but I chose not to return to my job and finding a new one was a lot more difficult than I'd expected.) Anyway, I spent enormous time and effort on the game during those eight months, and it dropped significantly once I went back to work. For the last year or so, I've been playing more like 10 hours per week. | ||
EscPlan9
United States2777 Posts
For me, I'm concentrating on what I want to do with my long-term career - programming, web development, and databasing. After I experienced some dead end jobs, I realized I would never enjoy my life like that. Think about things you've always wanted to learn and experience, and concentrate on one at a time. Look up more information on it, talk with others interested in it, join communities that share these interests, etc. Good luck! | ||
Torenhire
United States11681 Posts
(that and I hate holy power...I don't care if it's OP one-button-win-all whatever the fuck, I hate it. Stupid addition to my class...and I will never roll another character, I've played my pally since vanilla release. ) I didn't quit WoW because I was unable to have a life outside of it. I work full time, I would go out (when work allowed..I work some crazy hours) and all that fun stuff. I'm just saying that since I stopped playing I've noticed that I've just got a...less boring view of life? I don't know how to describe it. I'm not like... "Oh man WoW is gone FINALLY WOOT" it's more like...look at all this stuff I've missed out on because I've been tunneled into WoW all this time. I loved WoW. Not only was it a fun game, my gf played it too, so it was something we could do together. I just felt like it was too overwhelming with my other hobbies and since stepping away I've just enjoyed doing more things, I guess. | ||
Tasty.280
United States21 Posts
I haven't played since then but I might start up for the fourth time. The thing I don't like is that the game just gets easier and easier every patch and expansion and it's rediculous. The PvP also seems less fun, which is the main reason why I started playing WoW. I have the urge to start playing again with my friend thought, who occasionally brings his laptop over my house and plays when he stays the night. The game isn't really that addicting (maybe just not for me?), I don't know why people can't just refrain from playing. It's pretty easy to have a social life and a job while you're into WoW, especially if you're in school because you get a lot of social interaction there. I tended to get bored after playing for a long time, it feels like there's not much left to do. | ||
Lysenko
Iceland2128 Posts
BTW I never said I didn't have many hobbies! :D Just have more time for them now that I'm out of WoW. | ||
EscPlan9
United States2777 Posts
On March 25 2011 20:24 Lysenko wrote: Raiding isn't necessarily monotonically getting easier -- in Cataclysm, raiding started out pretty rough, then there were nerfs, which has been the pattern for the entire game. The hardest heroic modes are still pretty difficult, and that's where the real challenge is for people who are into that kind of thing. I can't really be bothered at this point. BTW I never said I didn't have many hobbies! :D Just have more time for them now that I'm out of WoW. The part I hated about raids were you had to rely on 9+ other people to not screw up to MAYBE get a relevant drop that MAYBE is an improvement and then MAYBE win the item. And how much did that item really help you out in the end? Doing the same fight for three hours without making a mistake but others wiping the raid was beyond frustrating. About hobbies, I apologize I mistakenly assumed one of the responders here mentioning problems with not having motivation or other hobbies was you. | ||
Zorkmid
4410 Posts
You won't even miss it after awhile! | ||
Deadeight
United Kingdom1629 Posts
"Is it that it's fun, or that it let's you forget yourself?" | ||
proot
United States126 Posts
I felt REALLY bad when I quit. I was pretty much on the verge of depression because I was leaving all my e-buddies behind. I realized it wasn't so bad when I switched to SC2 because of real ID and skype from time to time, and the real life improvements after quitting are completely worth it. WoW is the worst possible game to get into as a competitive player. You end up being better than everyone for a few months, then you're back down to the level with casuals that are playing 30 min a day or raiding one hour a week. So, you end up spending even more time getting to the top and the cycle starts over after six months. If I could restart my life, I would stay the hell away from WoW. It's identical to being on a drug. | ||
zZygote
Canada898 Posts
On March 26 2011 04:20 proot wrote: I played for three years, got five gladiator titles and one rank 1 title, ended up being the best player of my class on my server with the best gear score pretty much every season. I look back at that now and realize how fucking stupid I was to invest that much time into something so useless. My GPA was around 2.8-3.2 as I was playing WoW and skyrocketed to 3.8-4.0 when I started playing less and eventually quit. I felt REALLY bad when I quit. I was pretty much on the verge of depression because I was leaving all my e-buddies behind. I realized it wasn't so bad when I switched to SC2 because of real ID and skype from time to time, and the real life improvements after quitting are completely worth it. WoW is the worst possible game to get into as a competitive player. You end up being better than everyone for a few months, then you're back down to the level with casuals that are playing 30 min a day or raiding one hour a week. So, you end up spending even more time getting to the top and the cycle starts over after six months. If I could restart my life, I would stay the hell away from WoW. It's identical to being on a drug. Wow you totally are like ME LOL. As of late my GPA in Uni is 3.24, and before I was averaging 3.8's. I guess I should quit for my 3rd and 4th years | ||
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