this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2025
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Gaming

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[–] Harvey656@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago

Nier: Automata, like the final ending. I've 100% this game three times and each time I end tearing up, thinking about a world where would could all come together and help eachother, then I look at the news and that dream is immediately shattered.

[–] DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works 8 points 2 days ago

Life is Strange 1 - There are just a lot about life that I wished I could change. Lots of regrets. I think about the idea of butterfly effect a lot. I know a lot of movies also show this, but they often portray in a very "high stakes" scenario which its hard to feel relatable to, since its so far detached from realism. Meanwhile, in LiS, the portrays a scenario that's more localized, it "hits home" stronger, especially that part where...

spoilerMax was able to go all the way back to childhood. Like... that shit just triggered one of my childhood memories where I was being abused by my older brother and I ran away from home. I could've died that day, or worse, tortured and trafficked, or they could harvest my organs. I was supposedly a common thing the country I was from.

Life is Strange: True Colors

Some people might relate less, but for me I can relate to the Alex a lot, the emotional aspects of life. I wasn't an orphan, but I feel practically like I'm one. I wasn't originally supposed to be born, I kinda feel like this life, this "timeline", is an anomoly. Everyone in my family hates me, kinda like how

spoilerIn a flashback / dream sequence, prospective adoptive parents would reject Alex, just like how my home country's government have legally rejected (tried to, at least) my existence, and my parents, my older brother, they all hate me.

And I don't even have a "Gabe" like Alex has. Which hurts even more

That family argument thing before the dad abandoned them is also relatable. My parents would frequently threaten divorce, and threaten to abandon us. There are arguments all the timex between my parents, and my mother and older brother, and then my they would turn their rage towards me, the youngest in the household.

I didn't even have headphones to tune out the yelling. It was miserable, it was agonizing.

And I relate to how Alex never felt like there is a "home"

And also the ending how almost nobody really believed her (choice dependent, but I fucked it up somehow)

I don't even have the ability to feel emotions, yet everytime I hear those arguments at home, I feel like as if I was Alex, like I had her abilities to sense feelings. And those feeling are explosive and contaminates the entire house.

[–] iAvicenna@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago

ahhh Planescape Torment...

[–] phutatorius@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

How it affected me: Mr Wobbly Hides His Helmet. Many, many hours of enjoyment. But it also got me into trouble on a few occasions.

The game that changed the way I think: Go. I even got my first great job because I beat someone at Go, so he thought that meant I was smart. He was the hiring manager for a project that required international travel and which gave me high visibility within the company. But what it really meant was just that he wasn't a particularly strong Go player. I'm still an OK player, though one of my sons now plays at master level (which, he says, means that not all 12-year-old Koreans can beat him).

[–] InFerNo@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

The vanishing of Ethan Carter.

I was thinking about the ending for days. I wish someone else could experience it for the first time so I can finally talk about it with someone. This game is so good, audio, graphics and story wise, it's a shame it's not widely known.

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[–] s3rvant@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 days ago

Dominion

I loved and competed in various trading card games throughout high school however once married with kids I could no longer afford the hobby. Dominion caused a surge in the deckbuilding genre and ultimately led to my first published game design. Now board games and tabletop RPGs are a favorite for spending time with family and friends.

[–] Smoogs@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I’m still playing it: sons of forest.

How it changed my life: I have a much deeper appreciation to go into nature and feel more confident

Also having that deeper understanding to put together an earth quake survival kit.like you never know if you have to bail and you just gotta be ready to evacuate and survive.

Other games: Titan fall 2. I bawled at the end. I’m just now playing it through again. And I’m not one to replay a game but I would with that one given the bond. Never thought I’d cry at a game but that one …that one was special for me.

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[–] BrainInABox@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago

Metal Gear Solid 2

me, 12 years old in my room, with little awareness of 4th wall breaks:

mom! The TV is talking to ME, MOM!

[–] HazardousBanjo@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago

Halo 3 to cap off the original trilogy

[–] Baguette@lemmy.blahaj.zone 8 points 2 days ago (3 children)

Minecraft lol

I studied cs because of it, hell I even wrote about minecraft in one of my admission essays. Something bionicles to minecraft to stem pipeline as I would call it

I also really like PGR. It's a gacha game but I met a really nice community from it

If we're talking about great story driven games, signalis and nier are always my top favorites.

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[–] W3dd1e@lemmy.zip 7 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Fez.

I made everyone play the intro/tutorial. Most of them thought they broke it.

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[–] taxet_@sopuli.xyz 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Death Stranding. Ok not sure if that actually really changed my life, but it left me in a bit of a mixed emotional state.

See the thing is that I became a dad not that long ago and during the pregnancy and maybe a year or so after the birth of my kid I had this somewhat irrational fear of finding my kid just dead at some point in the crib or something like that. I fought past that fear eventually and the kid is now three and as healthy as one can be.

Then was it 2024 or something when the Director's Cut was released on Xbox. I never had a PlayStation (not for any other reason other than I just never happened to get one) so I was exicted to finally start playing this game I've heard so much about. I bought the game and played whenever I had time (if you have kids, you know how it can be) and loved the game, especially for the atmosphere and the sort of weird lore that was exciting to uncover for me.

Rest of the post contains spoilersThen I got the the part where you have to cut the umbilical cord of Mama's BT baby.

I wasn't prepared for that at all and it kinda just broke something in me. I had to stop playing and didn't play for like at least 6 months or so. It brought back too many of the feelings and fears I had previously gone through so I just needed to take a break. Like don't get me wrong, I actually DID like the scene for the beautiful moment it was and think it was amazing storywriting, it just caught me so off guard that I had to take a moment or ten.

After the break I kept going and the game still managed to keep me hooked and the story just kept getting better and better imo.

And then the ending.

I cried. A lot. I have never ever cried out loud to any piece of media, but I could literally feel Sam's emotions when he noticed that BB wasn't moving and was likely dead already. That was pretty much exactly the fear I had so you'll probably understand why it hit me so hard. And then when I hear that cry come from the game, the relief I felt was something I can't really describe well.

And after that I was sitting there in the living room, tears in my eyes, laugh-crying and just... wow. I don't know, if I'd played the game when it came out in 2019 before my kid was born and before the pregnancy and everything, I would've probably just thought it to be maybe a decent story and maybe tear up a bit at the end. But with all the other stuff that piled on before I got to play the game, it just added it's own effect to the experience. I really don't know if I can say that I was changed in any meaningful way, but I do kinda think that it might have at least helped me deal with the past fears a bit better so maybe in the future if I need to face them again, I can do it with more confidence.

One thing that I can say for sure at least is that I loved the game and I kinda wish I could play it again for the first time. The emotional roller coaster might've been a bit rough at times but damn it was a good one.

[–] SilentLight@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Boy oh boy, don't play the second one. It'll tear your heart out, throw it in a blender and force feed it back to you through a straw! The game is absolutely amazing but the emotions that 2 brought to the table were stronger than anything I've ever played.

Even though it was such a rollercoaster, I watched a friend beat it, and we cried together too. I'd give up a lot to play it again for the first time. Just, be prepared. If you dare!

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[–] Eq0@literature.cafe 10 points 3 days ago (3 children)

I’m not a gamer and I know I’m missing something when I see this comment section!

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[–] OddMinus1@sh.itjust.works 3 points 2 days ago

Magic: The Gathering - Arena, but in a different sense. I have played it a decent amount ever since I moved away from the city and have been unable to play with people over the table. I learned that it wasn't really the game itself which made me interested in Magic, but the interactions with people.

I have since quit the game and haven't really paid attention to its direction since.

[–] cRazi_man@europe.pub 10 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Binding of Isaac.

Played it as I was coming into adult life. This was my first roguelite. It sounds dumb....but it really stuck with me as a life lesson:

You can try your best and make sacrifices, and still end up unlucky with poor rewards. You get the opportunities you get, but even in this seeming randomness, you make choices to make the most of them. Training and skill makes up for some of the poor opportunities. Life is a roguelite.

Now I've got BoI on my Retroid Pocket 5 now. Still playing it.

[–] Cactus_Wolf@lemmy.cafe 7 points 2 days ago
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