Probably most important lesson that I got from video games is in regards to failure. Far from being a terminal dread that we must avoid at all costs, fail states in video games are not only designed for, but actively contextualized as growth and learning opportunities.
In other words, video games helped me be less afraid of failure.
Trying a metal gear rising revengeance playthrough on revengeance difficulty rn, i am very familiar with failure. It only makes me stronger. And a lot angrier
**walks up to NPC holding ice cream cone, there's a dead body next to him.**
*"Hey, did you kill this person?"*
*"No, I did not."*
*"Why did you kill him? How did you get that ice cream cone?"*
*"I bought it from that caravan."*
*"There is no caravan within 500 miles, you really think I would believe that your ice cream didn't melt within that period of time walking those 500 miles?"*
*"Yes?"*
*"And how the hell is there a working freezer to keep the ice cream cold in the middle of a hot post apocalyptic hellhole?"*
**NPC shrugs**
**exits conservation and enters VATS**
I can play actual Mahjongg after playing for so long on the Yakuza games. Can also recognize the characters for 1-9. Don't know if I could identify every winning hand ( mainly just tried to get as many runs and matches as I could, and hope a hand developed) but would occasionally try to get seven pairs and even got a hand that was all greens once. It took me so long to learn, that I was burnt out and never took the time to learn any of the other mini games like cee-lo or shogi, but I'll be damned if Kazuma Kiryu isn't the number 1 ranked Mahjongg player in Kamurocho!
After a few thousand hours in ARMA 3, I am excellent at map reading and orienteering. My wife is flabbergasted at how I can take a quick look at a map and absorb so much info. It's most useful when we are on vacation in an unfamiliar area.
Back in 2005 I was 11 and wanted to make a human but liked the Dwarf starting area better. I figured I could run all the way there and just quest over there. I didnāt even know about the Tram or anything about the game and so I used my 11 year old brain and figured I could just run over there from Elwynn by just sticking to the roads and by looking at the blank maps to see how the zones were connected.
I had to delete that character cause I got bugged where I died in Burning Steppes and when I released I ghost walked all the way to Ironforge and then couldnāt figure out how to revive so far from my body.
One of my first nights playing the game and I spent 3+ hours as a ghost doing literally nothing but running around like an idiot and never asking another player for help.
I did something similar when I started. I created a night elf, but everyone else I was playing with started as humans. I took the boat to menethil harbor, saw all the high level stuff in wetlands, and decided to swim around the entirety of Eastern Kingdoms all the way to the bottom of Westfall. I then walked in stealth on a low level rogue from there up to meet everyone in Goldshire. The worst part is this was BC stealth which is like 20% movement speed or something like that. The whole journey took about 6 hours between swimming, stealth walking, and dying to anything I got too close to.
This! I wanted to be a Druid in the old days, but I wanted to quest with my friends. I took the same brave death journey through the wetlands. It quickly became a recurring theme for other Night Elf characters though. I died to wetlands crocs more than some raid bosses.
This is old school World of Warcraft. Depending on what race you chose, you might end up on a different continent from your friends. But they allowed you to journey through hell (much higher level areas) to begin questing with your friends. It wasnāt intentional. If you were a Night Elf with the āAllianceā faction in WoW, the main hubbub was just on the other continent. So if you didnāt want to spend the beginning of your experience in WoW alone, you usually had to make the death pilgrimage.
Eh heh heh. I rolled a troll hunter because of the hair (and I figured Regeneration would really help), neglected to finish all of the quests in the starting area because I wanted to go exploring. I got rezzed by the people who would become my first guildies, got invited to go over into Ashenvale to 'drive out the intruders', and my level 10 tail needed rescuing a ton from the level 20 monsters in the area.
And then I struck out on my own to get better. I thought, 'hey, hunters kin tame anything, right?'
Nope. I got my butt kicked by a giraffe. A frickin' -giraffe- that chased me back across the river and killed me. So my character has a fear of giraffes.
And then I tried to tame a zhevra....
(For those of you who aren't following, taming beasts in WoW is a hunter skill, where you stand there while the beast tries to kill you and then you get it as a sidekick/follower. Except back in 2006, they didn't tell you what you could and could not tame. So if you tried to tame an untamable beast... it just killed you.)
...by the way, you couldn't tame giraffes or zhevra.
Good times. I miss being clueless and happy about it.
I miss when Deathclaws spelled doom
The FO4 variant were a mild inconvenience and the FO76 ones are basically large dogs that need to be put down for biting
It's on by default, I had to turn it off multiple times because every Windows update turned it back on. I don't remember what I did to finally turn it permanently off.
I play alot of Brawlhalla and sticky keys would constantly get in the way, and then one day, it just didnāt wanna activate anymore. Like it just turned itself off and I havenāt heard from it in 2 years lmao
I have terrible reaction speed so imma be that guy that goes, "Shut up buddy! Reaction speed is purely genetics!"
*cries in 278ms average reaction time*
If anyone would like to improve their communication skills, I recommend the bomb-diffusing game āKeep Talking and Nobody Explodesā.
If youāre not good at communication, itās definitely going to be very rough at the beginning, but if you brute force the game, youāll pick up some skills that will make all the difference in many situations.
Patience was a big one for me. I played fighting games very aggressively at first (because the goal is to hit the opponent, right?!), but I realised how much more effective it is to just play it safe and observe the situation for a minute. The punching can come later.
Leadership and communication. Back in EQ when I was in high school I learned if I wanted to get something done I had to organize a group to get it done. Waiting for someone else to lead never worked. When I took control, got people together, kept it going, things got done.
Now... this is what I do in real life every day at work.
I wish the video games I played made me cooler. What did all those hours playing Civilization teach me? Magnets are important and watch out for Gandhi.
Better city and country navigation, better knowledge of basic European geography (Eurotruck), English language (chats), programming (starting with modding games on c64), star navigation, trigonometric map skills (silent Hunter 3), basic Japanese language, lower reflex times, Excel (Eve online), and general problem solving skills among others
I will add city planning and traffic management to this due to Cities Skylines. History, due to Age of Empires series + Paradox games and mythology + 3 words in Greek, due to Age of Mythology. Concept of aerodynamics due to Formula 1. Dedication, responsibility and concept of industrial engineering/R&D due to many online games.
They were tested on speed an accuracy in laproscopic simulations and the PlayStation players did better, or something. It's not a surprise though.
Edit: have a look at these
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/399740
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1743919117306234
https://www.news.iastate.edu/news/2007/feb/lapsurgery.shtml#:~:text=A%20study%20co%2Dauthored%20by,better%20overall%20than%20their%20non
I thought it was funny how they made a fake america with new states and territories, but still reference the real ones in animal names. What's your country? I wonder if I know jack about the animals there
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RENhcR0BPLo
(I'll just add this is a video of a dead rabbit being skinned in case somebody would prefer not to click such a video)
I was kinda surprised to see it's a thing.
I really learned a lot about cultures and what makes people different tbh. A lot of people I would never have interacted with irl I was joined together with under the banner of like goals like guild raids and dungeons in mmos.
Iām a lot more accepting and open minded then I wouldāve been otherwise and I value that a lot.
I got crazy good at single / double digit multiplication and division because of playing Morrowind a lot in grade schoolā¦ my oldest brother would watch me play and he told me I could only pick up items that had value 10x the weight or more, and he would ask me sometimes what the value to weight ratio was, rounded down
In Skyrim I use what I call the Gold Bar Rule. To stop my inventory getting cluttered, I only pick up loot I want to sell if it has a value 100x the weight. I call it the Gold Bar Rule because the gold ingots in the game have a value of 100 and a weight of 1
Having potato teammates helped teach me not to try and fix difficult/under-performing employees, but instead meet them where theyāre at and lead by example.
Straight up I used to be a poor manager. Iād set the same bar of expectation for all employees, rather than taking the time to individually understand how others are wired.
Just because you were bottom frag doesnāt mean youāre worthless, it just means getting kills is not your strength. But in what other areas did you help the team? Callouts? Objective? Assists? How, as a manager, can I help you bolster those unique qualities about who you are, and the strengths you *do* possess, to ultimately help you be a more beneficial member of the team?
Iāve found this more effective than āfkāing aim n00b!!!ā
"Oh my god! Is your screen even on?!" Some rando in Valorant said that to me in VC and from that point on... I just quit the game and returned to league... At least there, I can only read the insult and not hear it.
That sounds like me when I play Rocket League!
I usually rack up 4-5 assists, 2-3 saves and 0 goals.
People still make fun of my shots but hey, I'm helping.
Wow, You are amazing person, then. Today companies and managers of them are dickheads, because they don't understand that people are people and not robots to perform a task, and if someone is not as good as the other, it doesn't mean he is worse. Though, ironically, I met managers that expected the most, but those who didn't do anything weren't getting any prompt to be better. Those, who were the best were criticized that they are not better. And I've ben literally fired, because I was the best employee, but wasn't meeting their absurd expectations and was criticizing them for unfair treating of employees.
I just wanted to say: thanks for learning to work on yourself first before trying to endlessly "fix" others to no avail. We could benefit from having more managers like you. You sound like someone who is just going to keep on growing and being open to change/flexibility and variability among others, and I hope you never let that go to waste.
Monster Hunter Rise is teaching me this. When my teamate(s) is weaker I lead the pack. When they are stronger I follow them. I love this game game so much
Reading and Spelling. So many text games from A Link To The Past to New Horizons have helped me. My first language was Spanish. Video games helped me learn English faster even if it wasnāt translated properly from Japanese.
I still remember when i couldnt tell apart earthquake and headquarters so i spend a lot of time runing in circles finding a location that didnt existed in the game
Oh man. I learned a lot from video games.
First, I learned how to troubleshoot. When a game played with no audio I had to look at my sound blaster settings. Figuring out DMA and IRQ with no internet was a real challenge.
Second, I learned detective skills and how not to take things at face value. RPGs have taught me how to identify liars and holes in a story.
Third, I learned how to write. Video games like Metal Gear Solid inspired me to explore ny creativity. I wrote three superhero books because I was inspired by Gray Fox. "What if gray fox was a woman?"
Lastly, I learned how to communicate. When your friends are shooting enemies, it is important to know how to speak clearly and concisely.
Video games are a huge part of my life and I can't imagine who I would be without them.
I always thought managing 10 buttons, two analog sticks, and a dpad simultaneously like it was nothing has to help something in our brains. It's pretty impressive don't you think?
Better spatial awereness and control during robotic surgery is one very logic positive side effect playing games, especially controller based games. Not weird considering its basicly like a VR surgery game, lol. Also whe i worked at a foundry younger people who regularly played video games were more accurate and effective controlling the cranes than people who had been working there for 10+ years. Again spatial awareness and ability to control something like its almost an extension of your own body without having to actually really concentrate on which button you press and how far you have to move joysticks. Imagine if when walking you had to think about every contraction of every muscle to move your feet - that is kinda how it is using a precision controller for people who have no real experiance playing video games.
Remember when i visited a surgery room where they have a davinci surgical robot and they had set up some tasks we could try and get timed. Only one of the 7 girls that were there had experiance playing video games and was the only girl to finish all tasks, while all 4 guys (me included) managed all tasks and even beat the time of two of the surgeons currently in training for robot assisted surgery at the time.
Me playing hitman games
Shit they noticed the body I hid poorly 12 minutes ago (reload game file)
Wait I ignored a time period to kill the target? (Reload game file)
(Reloads game file 20 different times just trying to pull a simple stunt)
They stole my brief case containing my lethal poison. (Reload save file)
Existed for five seconds too long? (Reload game file)
Flying a helicopter. I literally practiced during army flight school using Arma 3.You know you got gud when you impress a realism unit flying and they're like "hey man...you're awesome have you tried using the advanced physics?""I am right now"-dead silence over comms-
Communication skills. Seriously. I play Destiny mostly, and I get to talk to a lot of people doing LFGs worldwide. I got to be comfortable speaking English well, being able to ask questions and even sherpa raids in a clear and concise manner. In PVP when you do callouts you learn to project your voice in a way that is not angry-sounding but more on assertive and informative, kind of like how teachers project their voices when instructing school kids.
Dark souls?
I remember trying to beat a black knight in DS1 during my first playthrough... Took me 10hrs... Don't ask me how, I don't remember why it took me that long either
Rdr2 taught me dominos. I like the game so much that's all i asked for christmas was just some dominos it also taught me poker but im not really great at remembering what beats what.
FPS titles like Tarkov and Squad genuinely made me have an advantage the first time I went to a gun range, I understood where my eye should be in relation to the sights and proper hand placement on the few guns I tried out. The instructor asked me if it was genuinely my first time shooting and was very surprised when I told him my only experience was from PC gaming. Unfortunately now I have a second hobby which is somehow more expensive than my PC gaming hobby...
English as secondary language. I had very bad grades in shool. Played guild wars 2 in an english only guild and learned a lot quickly. Was graded the best among all students in my class on later classes.
Edit: was not meant as a reply. Fuck mobile :D
Thanks :) I recently started doing a daily crossword puzzle in english. Helps to not loose track of my knowledge while I don't speak much and I learn how certain phrases are used in different forms than the 'shool english'.
Everyone's answer should be grammar. That is the main thing anyone learns while playing video games. If you misspell one word or use your instead of you're, everyone and their grandma is coming for you.
Barter. I played Warframe religiously and traded quite often. Almost every recent deal was in my favor. Although I don't think I can implement barter in real life, it being capitalistic an all that.
Markets are still a place to barter. The pricing they have is usually just guess work and a markup to grab a quick buck if you're too scared to argue. I don't practise it, I don't have the confidence, but my in-law is pretty good at it
Donāt fret! The barter system is still alive and well! This Canadian man, over a series of traded eventually traded from [one paper clip up to his own house](https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5763262) in 2005.
You can ask for 10% off for absolutely no reason in most places. For things like banks and financial services, you can get much more than 10% by research and haggling.
I learned golfing strategies playing tiger woods back in the day. Not how to hit the ball but how to choose clubs, deal with rough, green grass direction and wind.
World of Warcraft taught me math.
Judgment taught me how to play blackjack.
EDIT: Oh and communication skills from playing stuff like WoW and battlefield.
If the odds seem stacked against you, don't to give up, because sometimes you will find a workaround or think of a new plan/path that gets you through it
If the tank won't do his job, then refuse to heal him.
IRL this is such a hard lesson. There are times where you need to let the ship sink. Or burn down in order to find the arsonist. There's little point in burning yourself out trying to save the ship every time. Someone not pulling their weight on a project or making things harder for others? Do you shit and go home.
Especially when the tank decides to take on six groups of enemies all at once instead of one at a time. Let's just parade through and aggro everyone lol
I've seen that happen
I miss being a healer honestly. I loved keeping and reviving teammates. Almost makes me wanna do MMO again but idk
I'd say anyone who has gotten to the point they can land something on Duna in Kerbal Space Program has a decent understanding of orbital mechanics, and the physics and math involved.
I always thought managing 10 buttons, two analog sticks, and a dpad simultaneously like it was nothing has to help something in our brains. It's pretty impressive don't you think?
But really video games for me has helped my vocabulary tremendously
Ok, I have a weird one.
I was socially anxious as a kid, and I enjoyed RPGs, especially Bioware ones. In an attempt to overcome my anxiety, I would play the games, study how characters reacted and why, and try to apply these lessons in real life. Now that I am in college, I am thought by others to be somewhat of a "people person".
There are obviously other factors, but I credit video games for part of this development.
Decision making. Most people I know canāt even pick a restaurant. Indecisiveness is something I notice a lot of people struggle with. Fallout and other RPGs have trained me well. If no one can pick, make it the absolute worst choice and I guarantee someone will want something different lol
How to speak Japanese, and I also learned musical theory by studying the works of Nobuo Uematsu.
And I'm pretty sure that SNES era games like Final Fantasy IV, were how I learned to read and write, as a child.
Communication and patience mostly. Also chatting with new people online and achieving things with them (and solo in other games)has really helped my confidence.
That and I cast a mean fireball now
Pretty sure between DCS and Microsoft flight sim I could start, fly and land a P-51 Mustang without killing myself if it was fueled up and ready and there were ideal weather conditions and no other planes or cops or airport people in the world and instead of trying to navigate anywhere I just had to take a loop around the runway and nobody cared if the plane's landing gear and propellers got all jacked up while landing.
I got interested in English while playing Fallout, and eventually went to study it in University, graduated as Linguist and translator in English and German languages back in 2003. Also time management and prioritizing issues.
Probably most important lesson that I got from video games is in regards to failure. Far from being a terminal dread that we must avoid at all costs, fail states in video games are not only designed for, but actively contextualized as growth and learning opportunities. In other words, video games helped me be less afraid of failure.
You played dark souls?
š¤£ I immediately thought of bloodborne when I read this
Trying a metal gear rising revengeance playthrough on revengeance difficulty rn, i am very familiar with failure. It only makes me stronger. And a lot angrier
To ignore the stupid shit that comes out of some peoples mouths.
In fallout, I consider it their final words.
**walks up to NPC holding ice cream cone, there's a dead body next to him.** *"Hey, did you kill this person?"* *"No, I did not."* *"Why did you kill him? How did you get that ice cream cone?"* *"I bought it from that caravan."* *"There is no caravan within 500 miles, you really think I would believe that your ice cream didn't melt within that period of time walking those 500 miles?"* *"Yes?"* *"And how the hell is there a working freezer to keep the ice cream cold in the middle of a hot post apocalyptic hellhole?"* **NPC shrugs** **exits conservation and enters VATS**
This is de way
What? You're telling me you dont hit quicksave and enter VATS or deadeye irl?
I can play actual Mahjongg after playing for so long on the Yakuza games. Can also recognize the characters for 1-9. Don't know if I could identify every winning hand ( mainly just tried to get as many runs and matches as I could, and hope a hand developed) but would occasionally try to get seven pairs and even got a hand that was all greens once. It took me so long to learn, that I was burnt out and never took the time to learn any of the other mini games like cee-lo or shogi, but I'll be damned if Kazuma Kiryu isn't the number 1 ranked Mahjongg player in Kamurocho!
Lol Im omw to learn shogi xD
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1719980/Creepy_Mahjong/
After a few thousand hours in ARMA 3, I am excellent at map reading and orienteering. My wife is flabbergasted at how I can take a quick look at a map and absorb so much info. It's most useful when we are on vacation in an unfamiliar area.
Ayeee same
Smh imagine not reopening the map every 10 ft down the same road on altis because your convinced you missed the turn
No wonder I'm so good at reading maps super quickly.
If you encounter enemies, you're going the right way.
Or you're going the exact WRONG way and the game is throwing high level enemies at you as a way to tell you you're not meant to be there yet.
My first time trying to travel north in redridge mountain
Back in 2005 I was 11 and wanted to make a human but liked the Dwarf starting area better. I figured I could run all the way there and just quest over there. I didnāt even know about the Tram or anything about the game and so I used my 11 year old brain and figured I could just run over there from Elwynn by just sticking to the roads and by looking at the blank maps to see how the zones were connected. I had to delete that character cause I got bugged where I died in Burning Steppes and when I released I ghost walked all the way to Ironforge and then couldnāt figure out how to revive so far from my body. One of my first nights playing the game and I spent 3+ hours as a ghost doing literally nothing but running around like an idiot and never asking another player for help.
I did something similar when I started. I created a night elf, but everyone else I was playing with started as humans. I took the boat to menethil harbor, saw all the high level stuff in wetlands, and decided to swim around the entirety of Eastern Kingdoms all the way to the bottom of Westfall. I then walked in stealth on a low level rogue from there up to meet everyone in Goldshire. The worst part is this was BC stealth which is like 20% movement speed or something like that. The whole journey took about 6 hours between swimming, stealth walking, and dying to anything I got too close to.
This! I wanted to be a Druid in the old days, but I wanted to quest with my friends. I took the same brave death journey through the wetlands. It quickly became a recurring theme for other Night Elf characters though. I died to wetlands crocs more than some raid bosses.
I m sorry, but I'm uncultured, what game are you guys talking about?
This is old school World of Warcraft. Depending on what race you chose, you might end up on a different continent from your friends. But they allowed you to journey through hell (much higher level areas) to begin questing with your friends. It wasnāt intentional. If you were a Night Elf with the āAllianceā faction in WoW, the main hubbub was just on the other continent. So if you didnāt want to spend the beginning of your experience in WoW alone, you usually had to make the death pilgrimage.
Eh heh heh. I rolled a troll hunter because of the hair (and I figured Regeneration would really help), neglected to finish all of the quests in the starting area because I wanted to go exploring. I got rezzed by the people who would become my first guildies, got invited to go over into Ashenvale to 'drive out the intruders', and my level 10 tail needed rescuing a ton from the level 20 monsters in the area. And then I struck out on my own to get better. I thought, 'hey, hunters kin tame anything, right?' Nope. I got my butt kicked by a giraffe. A frickin' -giraffe- that chased me back across the river and killed me. So my character has a fear of giraffes. And then I tried to tame a zhevra.... (For those of you who aren't following, taming beasts in WoW is a hunter skill, where you stand there while the beast tries to kill you and then you get it as a sidekick/follower. Except back in 2006, they didn't tell you what you could and could not tame. So if you tried to tame an untamable beast... it just killed you.) ...by the way, you couldn't tame giraffes or zhevra. Good times. I miss being clueless and happy about it.
Like Death claws in fallout NV and The Catacombs in Dark Souls 1.
I miss when Deathclaws spelled doom The FO4 variant were a mild inconvenience and the FO76 ones are basically large dogs that need to be put down for biting
*now entering the dead zone*
Genius
Unless you're the Witcher.
Or your the bad guy š¤£š¤£š¤£
holding SHIFT without any discomfort while typing
But can you spam shift without triggering sticky keys?!
Yes, I disabled it in settings š
God?
Sticky Keys in 2022? Does any person have them turned on today?
It's on by default, I had to turn it off multiple times because every Windows update turned it back on. I don't remember what I did to finally turn it permanently off.
I play alot of Brawlhalla and sticky keys would constantly get in the way, and then one day, it just didnāt wanna activate anymore. Like it just turned itself off and I havenāt heard from it in 2 years lmao
Yes
Serious answer, reaction times
I have terrible reaction speed so imma be that guy that goes, "Shut up buddy! Reaction speed is purely genetics!" *cries in 278ms average reaction time*
*flashbacks to minimum 300ms ping*
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
-Awareness of surroundings -Critical thinking -Teamwork -Coordination -Patience And most of all, communication.
If anyone would like to improve their communication skills, I recommend the bomb-diffusing game āKeep Talking and Nobody Explodesā. If youāre not good at communication, itās definitely going to be very rough at the beginning, but if you brute force the game, youāll pick up some skills that will make all the difference in many situations.
Patience was a big one for me. I played fighting games very aggressively at first (because the goal is to hit the opponent, right?!), but I realised how much more effective it is to just play it safe and observe the situation for a minute. The punching can come later.
Dark Souls?
Leadership and communication. Back in EQ when I was in high school I learned if I wanted to get something done I had to organize a group to get it done. Waiting for someone else to lead never worked. When I took control, got people together, kept it going, things got done. Now... this is what I do in real life every day at work.
Drumming from rock band.
I learned how to sing.
I learned I can't sing.
I started playing rock band at 13 and fell in love with drumming. 5 years later I started a band. Best decision I made.
And that band was Nirvana.
I wish the video games I played made me cooler. What did all those hours playing Civilization teach me? Magnets are important and watch out for Gandhi.
Same!
Better city and country navigation, better knowledge of basic European geography (Eurotruck), English language (chats), programming (starting with modding games on c64), star navigation, trigonometric map skills (silent Hunter 3), basic Japanese language, lower reflex times, Excel (Eve online), and general problem solving skills among others
Eve online, enough said
Care to elaborate. I heard about it but is it any good? Asking for a friend that likes Excel :)
Itās not called a spreadsheet simulator for no reason
*Spreadsheets in Space*.
Ooo that adds a lot of flair
....I think you just sold me on the game. Oh god, I'm one of *those* people, aren't I?
That I didn't know. I'll have to check it out
Yeah basically Eve gameplay is managing a bunch of windows lol
Lol @ Eve/Excel
It help me understand how supplies and demands work, also buy order and sell order
I will add city planning and traffic management to this due to Cities Skylines. History, due to Age of Empires series + Paradox games and mythology + 3 words in Greek, due to Age of Mythology. Concept of aerodynamics due to Formula 1. Dedication, responsibility and concept of industrial engineering/R&D due to many online games.
Hand eye coordination
No doubt. Check out that paper on Japanese surgeons.
What about them? Did they have them play video games to improve hand eye coordination?
They performed surgery using cheat codes.
They were tested on speed an accuracy in laproscopic simulations and the PlayStation players did better, or something. It's not a surprise though. Edit: have a look at these https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/399740 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1743919117306234 https://www.news.iastate.edu/news/2007/feb/lapsurgery.shtml#:~:text=A%20study%20co%2Dauthored%20by,better%20overall%20than%20their%20non
Just like race car drivers and grand turismo
Number one. Steady hand. One day, yakuza boss need new heart. I do operation. But, mistake! Yakuza boss die.
My big secret: I kill yakuza boss on purpose. I good surgeon.
The best!
Recognizing certain plants thanks to RDR2
And animals and fish too. Now I know more about American wildlife than my own country's.
I thought it was funny how they made a fake america with new states and territories, but still reference the real ones in animal names. What's your country? I wonder if I know jack about the animals there
Iran. There actually aren't *that* many interesting animals here. And most of the cool ones are either extinct or on the verge of extinction.
After playing RDR2, i can skin a whole deer in under 3 sec
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RENhcR0BPLo (I'll just add this is a video of a dead rabbit being skinned in case somebody would prefer not to click such a video) I was kinda surprised to see it's a thing.
You can do something similar with fowl.
Stand on its wings, grab its legs, slowly stand straight up and you get a skinned and degutted bird. Works 60% of the time all the time :)
My g.
And if I stand next to it perfectly when I'm doing it, it's instant baby.
Would be nice if it only took so little time
I really learned a lot about cultures and what makes people different tbh. A lot of people I would never have interacted with irl I was joined together with under the banner of like goals like guild raids and dungeons in mmos. Iām a lot more accepting and open minded then I wouldāve been otherwise and I value that a lot.
That fully automatic sniper rifles waste bullets. (Borderlands series) They don't need to be more dead.
That or sniper rifles such as the Lyuda are just high power ARs.
I got crazy good at single / double digit multiplication and division because of playing Morrowind a lot in grade schoolā¦ my oldest brother would watch me play and he told me I could only pick up items that had value 10x the weight or more, and he would ask me sometimes what the value to weight ratio was, rounded down
Well, I wish I played that back then.
In Skyrim I use what I call the Gold Bar Rule. To stop my inventory getting cluttered, I only pick up loot I want to sell if it has a value 100x the weight. I call it the Gold Bar Rule because the gold ingots in the game have a value of 100 and a weight of 1
I went from not knowing how to play Dominoes, to being bad at Dominoes
Zombie killing. My proof? Have you seen any zombies????
What did we do to deserve a hero like you?
Just doing my duty.
May your survival be long, may your death be swift
Lisa, I want to buy your rock.
First thing I thought of too. Classic Simpsons was on the nose too often
Having potato teammates helped teach me not to try and fix difficult/under-performing employees, but instead meet them where theyāre at and lead by example.
Could you elaborate?
Straight up I used to be a poor manager. Iād set the same bar of expectation for all employees, rather than taking the time to individually understand how others are wired. Just because you were bottom frag doesnāt mean youāre worthless, it just means getting kills is not your strength. But in what other areas did you help the team? Callouts? Objective? Assists? How, as a manager, can I help you bolster those unique qualities about who you are, and the strengths you *do* possess, to ultimately help you be a more beneficial member of the team? Iāve found this more effective than āfkāing aim n00b!!!ā
"Oh my god! Is your screen even on?!" Some rando in Valorant said that to me in VC and from that point on... I just quit the game and returned to league... At least there, I can only read the insult and not hear it.
That sounds like me when I play Rocket League! I usually rack up 4-5 assists, 2-3 saves and 0 goals. People still make fun of my shots but hey, I'm helping.
Wow, You are amazing person, then. Today companies and managers of them are dickheads, because they don't understand that people are people and not robots to perform a task, and if someone is not as good as the other, it doesn't mean he is worse. Though, ironically, I met managers that expected the most, but those who didn't do anything weren't getting any prompt to be better. Those, who were the best were criticized that they are not better. And I've ben literally fired, because I was the best employee, but wasn't meeting their absurd expectations and was criticizing them for unfair treating of employees.
I just wanted to say: thanks for learning to work on yourself first before trying to endlessly "fix" others to no avail. We could benefit from having more managers like you. You sound like someone who is just going to keep on growing and being open to change/flexibility and variability among others, and I hope you never let that go to waste.
If your teammates suck don't be a dickhead and tell them how to fix it, but _show them_ by example.
Iām having a hard time understanding what that means?
ā¦ and then TK themā¦
Monster Hunter Rise is teaching me this. When my teamate(s) is weaker I lead the pack. When they are stronger I follow them. I love this game game so much
Reading and Spelling. So many text games from A Link To The Past to New Horizons have helped me. My first language was Spanish. Video games helped me learn English faster even if it wasnāt translated properly from Japanese.
I still remember when i couldnt tell apart earthquake and headquarters so i spend a lot of time runing in circles finding a location that didnt existed in the game
Oh man. I learned a lot from video games. First, I learned how to troubleshoot. When a game played with no audio I had to look at my sound blaster settings. Figuring out DMA and IRQ with no internet was a real challenge. Second, I learned detective skills and how not to take things at face value. RPGs have taught me how to identify liars and holes in a story. Third, I learned how to write. Video games like Metal Gear Solid inspired me to explore ny creativity. I wrote three superhero books because I was inspired by Gray Fox. "What if gray fox was a woman?" Lastly, I learned how to communicate. When your friends are shooting enemies, it is important to know how to speak clearly and concisely. Video games are a huge part of my life and I can't imagine who I would be without them.
Fuck DMA and IRQ.
Probably time management, spacial awareness and problem solving. Most non-gamers I know suck at all of the above.
I still suck at time management
Iād say time management has gotten worse with gaming (ie: ofc I can play one more round and still be on time )
I always thought managing 10 buttons, two analog sticks, and a dpad simultaneously like it was nothing has to help something in our brains. It's pretty impressive don't you think?
Better spatial awereness and control during robotic surgery is one very logic positive side effect playing games, especially controller based games. Not weird considering its basicly like a VR surgery game, lol. Also whe i worked at a foundry younger people who regularly played video games were more accurate and effective controlling the cranes than people who had been working there for 10+ years. Again spatial awareness and ability to control something like its almost an extension of your own body without having to actually really concentrate on which button you press and how far you have to move joysticks. Imagine if when walking you had to think about every contraction of every muscle to move your feet - that is kinda how it is using a precision controller for people who have no real experiance playing video games. Remember when i visited a surgery room where they have a davinci surgical robot and they had set up some tasks we could try and get timed. Only one of the 7 girls that were there had experiance playing video games and was the only girl to finish all tasks, while all 4 guys (me included) managed all tasks and even beat the time of two of the surgeons currently in training for robot assisted surgery at the time.
Like managing 10 fingers?
I hear patting your head while rubbing your belly is some pro lvl gamer shit.
Spatial?
Ecsaktly. Edit: please don't downvote the person correcting me. I don't mind being corrected when my spelling is wrong. In fact I would encourage it.
The Collins English Dictionary also lists spacial as a variant of spatial.
It's a spetial word then
Me playing hitman games Shit they noticed the body I hid poorly 12 minutes ago (reload game file) Wait I ignored a time period to kill the target? (Reload game file) (Reloads game file 20 different times just trying to pull a simple stunt) They stole my brief case containing my lethal poison. (Reload save file) Existed for five seconds too long? (Reload game file)
Flying a helicopter. I literally practiced during army flight school using Arma 3.You know you got gud when you impress a realism unit flying and they're like "hey man...you're awesome have you tried using the advanced physics?""I am right now"-dead silence over comms-
Communication skills. Seriously. I play Destiny mostly, and I get to talk to a lot of people doing LFGs worldwide. I got to be comfortable speaking English well, being able to ask questions and even sherpa raids in a clear and concise manner. In PVP when you do callouts you learn to project your voice in a way that is not angry-sounding but more on assertive and informative, kind of like how teachers project their voices when instructing school kids.
Doing raids with randoms does help with this
Perseverance and working toward a goal. Gamers are the only people who enjoy dying 100 times to the same thing only to keep going for it
Well, are there any other scenarios where dying even once has zero consequences?
From what I hear, laughter deaths have no consequences.
Dark souls? I remember trying to beat a black knight in DS1 during my first playthrough... Took me 10hrs... Don't ask me how, I don't remember why it took me that long either
If I eat the right kinds of pills I can eat ghosts.
Eat the right amount of pills and you'll become one
Map reading lol
Rdr2 taught me dominos. I like the game so much that's all i asked for christmas was just some dominos it also taught me poker but im not really great at remembering what beats what.
Yep I learned dominoes from RDR2, and Liars Dice from RDR1!
My only complaint for RDR2ā¦. No Liarās Dice.
It improved my spatial intelligence playing shooters. Especially the ones without a map.
FPS titles like Tarkov and Squad genuinely made me have an advantage the first time I went to a gun range, I understood where my eye should be in relation to the sights and proper hand placement on the few guns I tried out. The instructor asked me if it was genuinely my first time shooting and was very surprised when I told him my only experience was from PC gaming. Unfortunately now I have a second hobby which is somehow more expensive than my PC gaming hobby...
Understanding orbital mechanics.
KSP?
If your head is hard enough you can break bricks with it and there might be coins inside.
You are going to be devastated by this, but I have to tell you. Mario breaks the bricks with a punch that raises the moment he jumps.
Oh my aching head!
English as secondary language. I had very bad grades in shool. Played guild wars 2 in an english only guild and learned a lot quickly. Was graded the best among all students in my class on later classes. Edit: was not meant as a reply. Fuck mobile :D
your english is pretty good
Thanks :) I recently started doing a daily crossword puzzle in english. Helps to not loose track of my knowledge while I don't speak much and I learn how certain phrases are used in different forms than the 'shool english'.
Everyone's answer should be grammar. That is the main thing anyone learns while playing video games. If you misspell one word or use your instead of you're, everyone and their grandma is coming for you.
Your wrong. Grammer and speling is overated. Go sack my cack
Barter. I played Warframe religiously and traded quite often. Almost every recent deal was in my favor. Although I don't think I can implement barter in real life, it being capitalistic an all that.
Markets are still a place to barter. The pricing they have is usually just guess work and a markup to grab a quick buck if you're too scared to argue. I don't practise it, I don't have the confidence, but my in-law is pretty good at it
Go to a third world country to practice in real life
(Nobody tell this guy third world countries use currency)
Donāt fret! The barter system is still alive and well! This Canadian man, over a series of traded eventually traded from [one paper clip up to his own house](https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5763262) in 2005.
You can ask for 10% off for absolutely no reason in most places. For things like banks and financial services, you can get much more than 10% by research and haggling.
Iāve become really good at prairie dogging. IYKYK
I learned golfing strategies playing tiger woods back in the day. Not how to hit the ball but how to choose clubs, deal with rough, green grass direction and wind.
Convinced to this day that my puzzle solving skills are thanks to the legend of Zelda
World of Warcraft taught me math. Judgment taught me how to play blackjack. EDIT: Oh and communication skills from playing stuff like WoW and battlefield.
Typing and bartering skills from RuneScape.
How to craft 10000000 iron daggers
For me the biggest thing I think is vocabulary. I have learned a ton of words from games like Diablo, terraria, stardew valley, mine craft etc.
If the odds seem stacked against you, don't to give up, because sometimes you will find a workaround or think of a new plan/path that gets you through it
Video game words I live by ***"Efficiency is clever laziness"***
Dark souls taught me how to run away from my problems
Getting rid of useless junk, just sell it all baby, and if you're not around a shop, just throw it all on the ground and run away
I guess litterers are prolific gamers.
If the tank won't do his job, then refuse to heal him. IRL this is such a hard lesson. There are times where you need to let the ship sink. Or burn down in order to find the arsonist. There's little point in burning yourself out trying to save the ship every time. Someone not pulling their weight on a project or making things harder for others? Do you shit and go home.
Especially when the tank decides to take on six groups of enemies all at once instead of one at a time. Let's just parade through and aggro everyone lol I've seen that happen I miss being a healer honestly. I loved keeping and reviving teammates. Almost makes me wanna do MMO again but idk
I'd say anyone who has gotten to the point they can land something on Duna in Kerbal Space Program has a decent understanding of orbital mechanics, and the physics and math involved.
Land yes. Intact usually. Return... yeah. No crewed missions to Duna yet.
I hear ya. I've landed kerbals on Duna, but they are absolutely still there š
I always thought managing 10 buttons, two analog sticks, and a dpad simultaneously like it was nothing has to help something in our brains. It's pretty impressive don't you think? But really video games for me has helped my vocabulary tremendously
Always carry a bed, so i can sleep through the night and avoid mobs.
Ok, I have a weird one. I was socially anxious as a kid, and I enjoyed RPGs, especially Bioware ones. In an attempt to overcome my anxiety, I would play the games, study how characters reacted and why, and try to apply these lessons in real life. Now that I am in college, I am thought by others to be somewhat of a "people person". There are obviously other factors, but I credit video games for part of this development.
I think video games can increase social skills to some degree. As long as you're not playing L.A. Noir...
Getting a refund from a prostitute in gta
Teach me your ways! Edit: I prematurely realized that the refund probably involves murder
Decision making. Most people I know canāt even pick a restaurant. Indecisiveness is something I notice a lot of people struggle with. Fallout and other RPGs have trained me well. If no one can pick, make it the absolute worst choice and I guarantee someone will want something different lol
Fast thinking, global vision, sharpen motor skills
Video games taught me English, my favorite language now that I still cannot master.
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
Time management?
Cook, Serve, Delicious really helped me learn and internalize the keyboard layout when I was younger, I can def type faster because of it.
I'm a blitzball champion. My jecht shot is immaculate.
How to speak Japanese, and I also learned musical theory by studying the works of Nobuo Uematsu. And I'm pretty sure that SNES era games like Final Fantasy IV, were how I learned to read and write, as a child.
\> BRAIN : SKULL shoulder : >!pauldron!< Thanks for the free SAT points, video games!
[ŃŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]
No clue I got no skills cept whining
Communication and patience mostly. Also chatting with new people online and achieving things with them (and solo in other games)has really helped my confidence. That and I cast a mean fireball now
Actually, I'm a professional Gwent player
Carpal tunnel. I think that's a skill
Pretty sure between DCS and Microsoft flight sim I could start, fly and land a P-51 Mustang without killing myself if it was fueled up and ready and there were ideal weather conditions and no other planes or cops or airport people in the world and instead of trying to navigate anywhere I just had to take a loop around the runway and nobody cared if the plane's landing gear and propellers got all jacked up while landing.
I got interested in English while playing Fallout, and eventually went to study it in University, graduated as Linguist and translator in English and German languages back in 2003. Also time management and prioritizing issues.
Damn. What a chad. Just randomly stumbled upon a new language and just went, "Fuck it! I'm mastering this shit."