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Tucao from an otaku

I woke up a little stuck today, so I wrote some thoughts to warm my hands and recall my gaming career.

Let’s talk about virtual games first. As a person who was born in 1992, the first virtual game I came into contact with was of course Overlord. However, my regret in life is that I never really owned one. I always watched other people play, classmates, and cousins.

, the classmate's cousin, the cousin's classmate, of course they can also have fun when they lack teammates and opponents.

Later, the slightly more advanced GBA appeared. After it became popular for a long time, I bought a second-hand one from a classmate. I hid under the quilt and played Pokemon all night that day. From then on, I fell into this trap, from GBA to emulator.

I got to 3DS and played until I got to work.

Next is the most important PC game. During the entire middle school period, there was almost a new game every two weeks. At that time, I was exposed to all kinds of messy games. Unfortunately, I was the only one playing online games in the whole dormitory. Everyone else was

I am addicted to Warcraft, CF and DOTA, and I can only play competitive games with them in Internet cafes.

When I arrived at university, the spring of my gaming career finally ushered in. I played games with five other roommates for four years, especially Jiansan and LOL, which I have been playing almost forever.

It almost felt like a novel when Jiansan and San were working together on offensive and defensive battles. At that time, it was the first time I discovered that a few thousand people in a district could actually do so many **** things. It was even more exciting than the TV series, so there were hundreds of millions in the novel.

There will be all kinds of bloody plots around the player and the protagonist, which is really based on facts.

I won’t say much about LOL. It’s the only game I’ve played for 4 years. I’m a loyal Tencent fan. I played it during the closed beta. Later in S3, I teamed up with my roommates to participate in the City Contest.

In the second round, a Carter showed off the whole game. Yes, it was all because of the bad keyboard in the Internet cafe.

After talking about virtual games, there are of course table games, which borrow the background of the Forgotten Realm after all.

The earliest board game I came into contact with was Monopoly, and the earliest role play I came into contact with was the Pokemon simulation in elementary school. More than ten boys played the role of gym leaders and simulated battles with challengers for an entire noon. At that time, I also made plans for each game.

Unfortunately, it is impossible to expect elementary school students to abide by the rules regarding the number of times the skills are used and the damage they do. After being verbally threatened by the sports committee member, this set of rules was aborted.

Later in junior high school, by chance, I encouraged several roommates to play Yu-Gi-Oh! with me. The craziest time was when six of us played 3V3 battles all night long. As for the rules, most of them were agreed upon by the dormitory itself, and every time

In battle, we all have to argue over controversial card effects. Only if your rhetoric can be recognized by the majority of people can you activate the effect.

Some people may like to build powerful decks, but a few of us prefer to build related decks, and we can’t remember the specific ones.

But then we played so crazy that during a lunch break, the head teacher suddenly broke into the dormitory and confiscated all our cards, and the game was ended.

The last one is DND. We were still in junior high school. After we stopped playing Yu-Gi-Oh, we started reading novels, Legend of Minion, God Search and Mysterious Badge. During a night chat, we accidentally discussed the world view of DND.

Originally I wanted to encourage everyone to play this game again, but in the end I failed.

Firstly, compared to Yu-Gi-Oh!, the rules of DND are countless times more complicated. Secondly, there are more role-playing games than ordinary board games. This is the essence of DND, but I always feel that Chinese students lack a little bit of the spirit of secondary school.

, they are very resistant to this kind of game.

Not even in junior high school, and certainly not able to work now from high school to college.

Sometimes I think it’s quite lonely to be a nerd or a minority hobby group, because no one around you can talk about the things you really like, not to mention ACG, even Marvel, Lord of the Rings, and Harry Potter.

Well-known things no one is interested in.

In the end, I could only talk about this kind of thing with my cousin who is in junior high school. When I visited his house during the Chinese New Year, we talked for more than an hour about what kind of superpower we most wanted to obtain.

It’s hard to imagine that this would be the happiest time of the year for me to chat.

Okay, this is a weak complaint from an otaku, okay, I'm going to start coding officially.


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