• Machinist@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    That shit sounds addictive as fuck for the right kind of brain. Thanks for the explanation! .

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      The right kind of brain being most human being.

      Companies have made everything in their power to find what is addictive and how to implement it in a game to squeeze more money from players.

      • Machinist@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Different hooks for different folks.

        I escaped into Fallout 3 for a while in my late twenties, for instance. Multiplayer shooters are not very enjoyable to me. I don’t care to build the muscle memory to get good at it.

        In general, gaming is no longer important to me. I do still play some Tetris, and my girl likes watching me play Zelda so it’s a good way for us to have some couch time before bed.

        My life is pretty good, I have an easy wonderful marriage, I don’t need that sort of escape anymore. Have had trouble with alcohol since 2020.

        My wife has had problems in the past with mobile puzzle games like Candy Crush. From what I understand, those sorts of games are particularly effective at catching women 20 and up.

        Multiplayer shooters are particularly effective at catching boys and young men. I don’t have a source but I’m pretty sure most of the people playing shooters are pretty stereotypically male.

        Anyhow, yeah, the right kind of ‘brain’ is shorthand for cis-het males ages 12-25, at a guess. And yada yada, other gendered folks will get caught as well but probably aren’t the primary target for fortnite or whatever shooter.

        • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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          12 hours ago

          Live service games and mobile games use the same psychological tricks to keep people coming back and entice people to buy microtransactions.

          After that, the theme of the game appeal to different folks.

          I’ve learned to recognize my triggers, but it took a lot of conscious efforts to achieve that. I still buy some microtransactions from time to time for free games I play a lot, but this is a conscious decision I make and not a trigger making me buy things.

          And even then, I feel the temptations every time a cool skin is put straight in my face. The psychology behind all that has been distilled to a science and used against us.