Specially the ones where you have to find stuff.
I usually attempt and manage to get them without looking up any info, but other times I miss something and I don’t want to go thru the tedious process of re-combing whole sections of the levels, or even starting over, just to find some stupid note that I overlooked. Yet, I want the achievement, so I end up looking a guide and I feel like I haven’t truly earned the achievent.
Yes, I know that playing a videogame shouldn’t become a task and that I simply should play it the way I enjoy it the most, but I want too see what others think.
deleted by creator
Sometimes getting an achievement shows you some unique bit of content you wouldn’t have seen otherwise. In those cases I am 100% for it.
If that’s what brings you joy and how you like to play games, more power to you.
Seriously, it’s a game. There’s no wrong way to play if you’re having fun. One time I got stoned and zoned out to the start menu of ATV Off-Road Fury 2 for 30 minutes, it was one of the best gaming experiences of my life.
I liked the road rash title screen, but it’s hard to beat the Madden 92 title music. There has never been a point to buying a Madden game after 92
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://m.piped.video/watch?v=bsOBCPvkjYc
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Doesn’t matter if you used one or not. You still have to do it yourself with the help of the guide. I still find satisfaction in doing them.
Aside from the fact that people in your life may like that these things because they bring you pleasure. No one will ever really care about your video game trophies/achievements but you.
If no one else cares about them, then no one cares about how you got them.
If you think using a walk through or guide lessens your sense of achievement, then don’t do it and accept you may never 100% the game in question.
In the end, do whatever brings you the pleasure.
I never got the appeal of achievements in the first place. I see them more as friendly reminders than something actually worthwhile pursuing. Chasing them is only making things stressful and tedious, oftentimes annoying and grindy. That’s kinda the exact opposite of any of the reasons I play video games for in the first place. If you want to use guides to get that 100% completion badge, do it. But if you ask me, your question means that you’re letting other people tell you how to play your games on 2 different levels: first by the devs in telling you what “completing the game” has to mean for you and now, secondly, by strangers on the internet in their opinion about which ways to get there are appropriate. Play it the way you want! If you want to hunt achievements because it’s fun to you, do it! And if you feel like referring to guides to get there, then do that, too!
I don’t really care personally, just as long as someone enjoying the game…
Sometime, I do look at stuff online and that’s if I’m stuck and feel like I tried virtually everything and for whatever reasons, it’s not working. I get what you mean by you didn’t feel like you earned it but I usually try keep it to the minimum to advoid getting as that same reaction
For me it is a balance. Getting the achievement the correct way feels nice, but I am also aware that if the achievement is too dificult to get I might lose interest in the game. Add to this the fact that achievements are in fact made by human beings that are flawed by nature and could make them unfair, I refuse to compensate for bad design with my own time and attention.
If you enjoy getting the achievements and reach the point of frustration trying to get them, then yeah consult a guide. There’s nothing wrong with that.
When I’m enjoying a game and reach a dead-end like an impassible door that by rights with my huge arsenal I should be able to just break down, I have no problems “consulting the townspeople” to see what particular trick the game has in mind. Sometimes the trick makes sense, sometimes it’s something I would have never thought of and makes no sense. In that case I feel good that I didn’t let the game waste more of my time on it.
Even back before youtube guides, I used to use ASCII text guides to help when I got stuck at something. It also helped immerse me in the game I was playing to read about cool things I didn’t know about. But if you don’t feel like it’s deserved, don’t use guides. It doesn’t detract from my personal experience, because I usually don’t have that amount of time to put into a single game or a specific achievement.
Obviously, it’s fun, but it depends highly on the game.
It was actually one of my bigger issues with FF7. You had to follow a guide very closely to get things done in that game. There was one moment where you had to trigger a cutscene, and then immediately stop and backtrack halfway around the world with no fast or convenient travel options, then go back to where you triggered the cutscene and go to the next screen to trigger the next cutscene. Nobody, anywhere, is going to do that without a guide.
Yeah, I mean, that’s a very reasonable case.
If I need a guide I don’t bother.
Elden ring was an exception, since I only needed 2 achievements.
My opinion is to not have opinions about how other people enjoy their games. For myself, I’m not above using a guide but I’m also likely to just move on when it starts to feel like a study guide for a test.
Your lack of outrage is outrageous. Is this a game to you?