Big warning the following example details a big spoiler for one of my favorite games, Dragon Age Origins. The payoff for a game is without a doubt the best part of it, in other words, spoilers are dangerous because of their ability to just take that all away from someone. So rather than just saying, “No spoilers.” And forcing the person to hold in their excitement which will become a ticking time bomb, instead give them a range to talk about, like saying, “I’m only at chapter 3 so we can talk about the story up till then.” Or, “We can just talk about the game mechanics, but nothing as far as the story goes.” People are social creatures and we feel the need to talk about things we like, and you really can’t beat human nature. Personally, I think the best way to avoid a spoiler is to let people know at the start of a conversation that you want to avoid certain topics. When the payoff finally happens the player feels nothing, because they knew it was going to happen, rather than feeling the investment of losing an in-game friend. If the player knows beforehand that a person will die when they are likely to be hypersensitive to that person for the rest of the game, just waiting for them to die, like a ticking time bomb. On the way, mysteries may be solved and in-game characters may fall, but when these things happen at the pace that the game sets it feels like the player is involved in the world. Watching a movie is easy, the only thing you need to do is sit and watch, games require far more investment.Ī gamer will need to fight, think, and challenge the game to get the reward of winning. In my opinion, however, game spoilers are far more painful because of the fact that the player needs to be more involved in a game. Spoilers are present for both games and movies and are considered taboo. In fact, you could say that I am personally against reading on any kind of spoiler: Major plot twists, character building, endings before I even had a chance to try out a game. Suddenly, someone steals it away from you, most of the time on accident with just one sentence like, “ Yeah Princess Peach isn’t until like the last castle.” Even in games that are decades old like Mario, the principle is no less meaningful. It tends to ruin the experience of a game. People generally don’t like it when things get spoiled on them. “WHAT!? Dude, stop it!” Said John (Covering his ears and pretending not to hear.) “Wait, you didn’t know!? This game has been out for forever, man and the princess is in another castle.” Said Gina (Ha, classic! Reaching Bowser is quite the challenge no?) “What!? But he just fell in lava when I got the ax! Plus I just beat his castle, right!?” said John. John’s friend Gina says, “I guess that’s why you fight him a bunch more.” “Bowser really wasn’t all that tough, huh?” Says John. ( Warning: this article contains spoilers for the following games used for sake of example which is Super Mario Bros and Dragon Age Origins) Read at your own risk!
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