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Playing Games While Not Ruining Your Relationship?

Silicon Mike asks: "A nice sized group of us here at work recently picked up City of Heroes, and started playing together. While all of us were gamers to some extent, now we're all pretty addicted and want to play together online all the time. The problem some of us are running into is that our significant others aren't too happy with us gaming all the time. Other then the two obvious solutions (quit playing or dump the significant other) I'm wondering how other people have deal with it? I tried installing Zoo Tycoon on my other computer and saying 'Look honey, cute bears' but she just didn't bite."

34 of 1,054 comments (clear)

  1. Adulthood calls... by ChuckleBug · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry if it sounds harsh, but the solution IS obvious: Cut back on the gaming. Perhaps way back. In a healthy relationship, you and your SO will give each other time to pursue your own interests, and you'll both sacrifice some personal time for the other. You can't be a compulsive gamer and have a healthy relationship.

    If you have to be gaming all the time, as you say, it's time to grow up. And if you can't just do a little, then maybe you should give it up all together.

    I've been married 15 years, and it's largely because my wife and I both make sacrifices. There's no getting around it. I hope you work things out for the best.

    1. Re:Adulthood calls... by Luscious868 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Another obvious solution is to find an SO that has similar interestes so you can spend time with the SO and still do the things that you like to do.

    2. Re:Adulthood calls... by belgar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Mod this comment up. I love gaming as much as the next person, but reality check here: relationships are about sacrifice and compromise. In the comparison of gaming and your SO, if you don't recognize the more important of the two is the SO, then get out -- you ain't ready for a serious relationship, to be honest.

      Don't get me wrong, that's not a slag -- for some people, their friends, online or in the flesh, are more important than being in a committed relationship. Just don't leave the other person in limbo.

      Also, recognize the difference between "friends" and "gaming" -- is it the game you want to play, or the friends you want to play with? If it's the former, time to evaluate your priorities.

      --
      What does it mean to wake out of a dream
      and be wearing someone else's shorts?
      BNL, Born on a Pirate Ship (1998)
    3. Re:Adulthood calls... by gamma+male · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You say that now, but if you end up 30k in debt all from flowers you've bought her, she'll be pretty pissed and dump your ass before your creditors try to hassle her into paying for you for convenience.

      Compulsive anything (even cunnilingus) isn't going to work in a relationship unless you both have the same compulsion. And then while it's a relationship, it's certainly not healthy.

    4. Re:Adulthood calls... by ChuckleBug · · Score: 5, Insightful

      15 years of sacrifice seem like an awful long time...

      Maybe you're just deliberately missing the point, but just in case...

      It doesn't mean 15 years of sacrifice. It means that for 15 years, we both have made some sacrifices. For example, I don't go out with my friends every night like I used to. And sometimes I stay home so SHE can go out with friends. I don't even know what it would mean to be married without any sacrifices. That sounds like, "I'm doin' what I want, baby - if you don't like it, too bad."

    5. Re:Adulthood calls... by ShortedOut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I've got to agree with ChuckleBug here. I got married, then started playing DAoC a year later. It got to be 2 hrs a night, then 4, then 4 a night and every waking moment on the weekends.

      I wasn't paying attention to the wife, I wasn't doing housework, I wasn't cooking... nada, just a gaming freak for a few months. Almost had to get a divorce, mainly because I would jump down her neck if she tried to kiss me good night or something that would interrupt play.

      Finally recognized the signs of addiction and scaled back, got to playing 2 hours per night, and not at all on weekends. Then, thanks to the mechanics of DAoC, I couldn't accomplish much and I couldn't talk to the players that I wanted to talk to in 2 hours, so it made it easier to quit.

      MMORPGs are the devil on relationships because you can't always just turn it off because there's always something to do in game before you turn it off.

      The best thing to do, is get some single player games, or, even better, get in to FPS's where you can log in, go in Rambo mode, or just follow a couple of guys around and get the fragging out of your system for a couple of hours a week.

      But if you have any addictive tendencies, and have the propensity to melt into your computer game, cut out your MMORPG right away, and trade it in on a FPS, single player.

      Or, even better, spend your evenings drinking, talking and laughing with your SO. You did marry them for some reason. ;)

    6. Re:Adulthood calls... by Anonymous+Custard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The only difference is after she's done she actually thinks I'm interested in how ugly her best friends brother's cousin's roomate's nephew's baby is while I'm fully aware she couldn't give a crap if my Necromancer leveled !twice! tonight. :)

      I'd like to see a vote on how many guys here have encountered that double-standard. I get in trouble if I look bored when hearing about something boring, but I get a bored look if I try to talk about my latest Genossian Lab raid in SWG.

    7. Re:Adulthood calls... by 74nova · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I'm doin' what I want, baby - if you don't like it, too bad.
      and there lies the reason for high divorce rates
      --
      use your turn signal! you people act like it's divulging information to the enemy
    8. Re:Adulthood calls... by Torinaga-Sama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is my experience that men and woman deal with daily life stress in different ways, ironically they are two very different non-symbiotic ways.

      Women deal with their lives by talking about things that delve into the minutae of their daily existence.

      Men like to get really absorbed into something that doesn't envolve talking or an excessive amount of conscious thought like a game or tv.

      --
      (/local/home/curiosity)-#who -u|grep thecat|cut -c 44-49|xargs kill -9
    9. Re:Adulthood calls... by dynamo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      dude, stand up for yourself. i mean, outside of slashdot. you are supposed to have a partnership in a marriage, if you feel stepped upon (the way you describe it, that appears to be the case), speak up and get it out in the open and deal with it.

      if you want respect, act respectably.

    10. Re:Adulthood calls... by Keebler71 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'll give you a little tip that took me about 3 years to figure out. Women don't care if you care what they are talking about. They also don't care about their friends' problems that they just spent 6 hours listening about. They DO care that you listen to them, just like they listen to their friends to show them that they care about THEM, not the subject of their friends' story. To be geeky, with women it is about a good stable communications channel, rather than the channel's content.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    11. Re:Adulthood calls... by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, the high divorce rates are from people trying to suit themselves to the relationship instead of the other way around. They're too busy saying "you're not acting like a spouse is supposed to!" and not enough time asking themselves what having a spouse is supposed to mean for them.

      IMO, the parent is far more likely to have a successful marriage than the dozens of uber-moderated posts I've seen so far that have repeated the conventional wisdom of "relationships are all about sacrifices!" What's the point? Sacrifice for its own sake?

      A good relationship doesn't make you change, it makes you want to change. In a good relationship, you don't have to stop playing games, but you end up wanting to play them less. Once you start talking about doing things "for the good of the relationship," it's over; the relationship is supposed to suit the couple, not the other way around, and if either of you fall into that trap both of you will only end up with a lot of pain and resentment.

      I'm sure we all know at least one person that has been through marriage more than twice. Their problem isn't their since of independence or their unwillingness to change themselves, their problem is their focus on marriage as an end unto itself. "Oh, this isn't how marriage is supposed to be like! Time to move on!"

      And, by the same token, I'm sure we all know that one divorced couple that actually get along far better after the divorce than when they were married. They may even still live with each other, and people that didn't know them personally might think they were still married. What's their secret? Wittingly or not, when they found themselves stuck with having to choose between the other person and "marriage," they opted to scrap the ideal and hang on to the other person. And that's what marriage is really supposed to be about.

      Whether you like it or not, the parent poster has a far healthier attitude about relationships than the person who submitted the article. The parent isn't going to try to force themselves to change for the other person and end up resenting them for it.

      Anybody who wants to "protect the sanctity of marriage" has already failed, no matter what their motivation.

  2. Nice try, but... by Kid+Zero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unless you find a woman who can handle you playing games like that most of the time while ignoring her, you're out of luck. Most women (I've found) like to be paid attention to.

    Besides, women are more fun to score with. :D

  3. Well by Hott+of+the+World · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They both cost money, but I'd have to go with getting rid of the games (I know, blasphemy).

    When you're 60 years old and remembering the great times of your life, no ones going to say, "You know, I should have dumped that old broad and played more video games..."

    --
    | - | - |
  4. Time to grow up a little, IMO by Skyshadow · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As a 26 year-old who has owned every major game system since the NES and who is getting married next month, I have some experience with this: The best advice I can give is that moderation and comprimise are the only way to approach this.

    If the two of you can't work out a comprimise (spoken or unspoken), then you really don't belong in a relationship with one another. Gaming isn't the only thing that's going to eat into your life in the next few years -- work, children, clubs, friends, PTAs, softball games, etc. will all potentially require some kind of balance if you're going to continue a workable relationship. So look at this as a test run.

    Relationships are about cooperation -- they're about *not* just considering your own needs, but taking the other person into serious consideration. I used to play hours of Quake each day in college, but when we moved in together I realized I was ignoring her and I cut way the heck back. Now, I play where I have a chance; it's not a set schedule, just something we worked out (you can't live together without having time alone, IMO). I'll play some GTA while she reads or watches a chick flick on HBO. She understands it's something I enjoy, but I understand that I can't blow the unhealthy amount of time I used to on it. Welcome to adult life.

    Anyhow, my girlfriend (er, fiance... gotta get used to that before the wedding) is more important to me than numbing my mind in front of the Xbox. If yours isn't, well, maybe it's time to cut her loose and pursue your real interests.

    Weirdly, I actually found myself on the other side of this one back with Girlfriend 1.0; she started playing MUDs our freshman year of college and got absolutely addicted. Our three-year relationship went right into the crapper because she *obviously* preferred being in character in her little fantasy world to me (or reality in general for that matter -- she flunked out of school because she wasn't bothering with classes). I suppose that gave me a bit more empathy in terms of this situation...

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  5. Don't make her feel like she's 2nd place by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In general, you don't want to make your girlfriend feel like she's 2nd place. For example, don't go straight to the computer after getting home. Sit down, chat with her, let the day kinda die down before going to a game. This alone will make a much bigger difference than simply cutting back the number of hours involved. Sadly I found this out the hard way once.

  6. Just Say No by hardgeus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After having over a year of my life sucked into Ultima Online I can tell you from experience that you want to stay away from the MMORPG genre.

    These games are specifically designed to maximise addiction and require as much of your time as is possible. They are designed to make it impossible to just sit down for 15 minutes and have a fun little game.

    There is a whole world out there with actual real things that games only exist to simulate. Computer games are great while they are augmenting your real life. They are good for a little off time every now and then.

    When you reach a point where your wife/girlfriend/whatever feels neglected because of a video game, you need to question your priorities. Perhaps the proper question isn't how to get her off your back, but rather, is this game worth the time I am spending?

  7. Just a thought... by Ciannait · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One of the bonuses of City of Heroes is the lack of EQ or DAoC-style timesinks.

    You don't have to level your character before leveling your clothes. You don't have to camp a spawn for seven hours. You don't have to do ML10.

    The game is perfectly able to be played an hour or two at a time. In fact, it caters to casual gaming. If you're spending so much time playing City of Heroes that your girlfriend is getting pissed, there's probably a good reason.

    --
    A good traveller has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving.
  8. There is a world out there by Bruce+Perens · · Score: 5, Insightful
    In 1981, myself and half a dozen other people got jobs as computer disk operators in what was then the worlds foremost laboratory developing computer graphic animation. It was the predecessor of Pixar - indeed, the Pixar founders had just left there to go to work for George Lucas.

    We made $2.15 per hour. Operators would wait for someone to call to have a disk changed, and we would mechanically change the disk and run the predecessors of fsck (icheck, ncheck, dcheck, etc.). The systems ran Version 6 Unix, and there were two VAXes which ran 4BSD.

    There were several ways to entertain yourself while waiting for a call to do something. You could do your homework. You could try to learn more about Unix and C, which they didn't teach in the college because they had little practical application at the time in the eyes of the CS department. Or you could play rogue, an interactive computer game that ran with really primitive graphics on the VT100 terminal.

    Most of my colleauges chose to play rogue. I read the Unix and C documentation, which was only one book and about a foot of papers at the time. I had some computer programming experience, including assembler, but no formal classes in programming, as I was a communication arts student. But once I had read all of the available literature on Unix and C, I was able to get a job as an assistant systems programmer and start moving up in the lab. That eventually got me to Pixar.

    The folks who played rogue? They did OK, I guess. But I think they would have done much better if they'd taken the opportunity as seriously as I did.

    Look around. There is probably something to do that would be much more important, and eventually more fun, than the game-playing. You only get one life. Start living it.

    Bruce

    1. Re:There is a world out there by Trick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't doubt that works for some people. I'd probably be one of the other guys who did "OK, I guess."

      Back in my younger days when I had a lot of downtime on my hands, the very last thing you'd find me doing would have been to have my nose buried in a book. Given that, these days, the choices would be more like studying or fragging my co-workers, I'd choose a gut shot to the Notes admin in a split second.

      Granted, I'm a big-time geek, and I like learning new stuff at least as much as a good geek should. I'm a coder, network engineer, systems admin, and security guy rolled into one, and I like to think I'm pretty damned good at all of those. However, I wouldn't also be highly- (some might say over-) payed, and also working with people who I truly consider friends, if it wasn't for the relationships I formed at previous jobs. Based on my experience, it's hard to get people to really care about you five years after if they just remember you as the guy who was always reading the Unix manual in the corner.

      Obviously, I'm replying to someone who did pretty well for himself using the other approach. I'd just like to submit the opposing view that time spent screwing off with friends and co-workers isn't necessarily time wasted.

  9. Well by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Depends on what "cut back" means. If cut back means going from playing many hours a night, every night, to playing a few hours a week, I agree. However if cutting back means going from playing a few hours a week to nothing, then I think it's time to have a talk with the SO and maybe break up.

    Why? Well, as you said, relationships are give and take. Pat of that is both of you need time to do things that YOU enjoy, even if the other does not. Those should, of course, be limited, but people need time for their own fun even in a commited relationship. If your SO can't handle that, you probably are in an unhealthy relationship.

    I know far too many people, mean and women, where their life is all about what the other person wants. If the SO doesn't like it, it has to go entirely. If the SO want to do it, then they do. Not a healthy way to be.

    So if a woman wants you to cut back your gaming to not be the dominant activity in your life, that's a good thing. If she wants you to cut it out entirely, that's not and you need to talk about it.

  10. Re:Get the Significant other Involved in the game by GreaterThanZero · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Mod parent up! I remember when my boyfriend first got Earth & Beyond. It was soon after our relationship began, and I wasn't a fan of it. Granted, there are some new-relationship-sillies involved in that, like wanting to be together all the freakin' time. But I got over it, and when he got bored of the game, I got him back, as it were.

    Now City of Heroes. I didn't like it for the first few days(because from what I saw of the gameplay, it sucked...but that was because it was just for the first few levels, so the combat seemed slow because of lame recharge times)...so it looked like he was choosing a crappy game over me.

    But now I'm into it. And I'm lucky that my boyfriend encourages the inner gamer geek in me. He helps me and suggests strategies for when I'm/we're playing Soul Caliber 2, Diablo 2, City of Heroes, etc. etc. I say I'm lucky because he could just as easily be protective of his Xbox or computer(mine's old and can't handle much more than Alice). I also got over my aversion to City of Heroes because we had a talk about it. I made a big assumption that was wrong: he was choosing the game over me. But the reality, he said, was that he was choosing the game over doing nothing. I was afraid to speak up and ask to do things with him because I assumed I would annoy him and interrupt his levelling. Turns out that isn't the case; it was just a vicious cycle of him playing, me assuming he doesn't wanna be with me, me not saying we should do something, him assuming I don't wanna do anything, so he played the game. Luckily it was only a few days before that was straightened out. :)

  11. Join me, Luke... by The+Tyro · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or you can try to bring them over to the dark side...

    I must confess... I've tried it with my wife, but thus far have had no luck. Back in the day she was a relentless MUD'er, but now doesn't seem to have any interest in computer games whatsoever (I feel like Luke trying to drag Vader back to the Light side of the force... "there is good in him... I have felt it").

    Still, sacrifices are what makes a relationship work. She's intelligent, beautiful, funny, a good cook, a great mom, and makes more money than I do. Her only flaw seems to be that she married far beneath her station... a flaw for which I am eternally thankful.

    I'd give up the games for her... but she'd never force me to do that... give-and-take is a beautiful thing.

    I agree with the parent poster... you don't end a relationship for a lousy video game... I don't care how 1337 it is.

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  12. just think of your woman as a game by utexaspunk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it's simple. your woman, and even your life, can be viewed as a game. instead of working hard to score in a game, work hard to score with your woman... instead of exploring levels of some fake world, figure out what places you can take your woman to in the real world that get her in the mood. figure out how to get her to do x and y things that she would never think of doing.

    making your woman happy and the resultant behaviors she will perform for you are infinitely more rewarding than any intangible, fictional reward a game might offer

    trust me, evolution has made women the most challenging and addictive game ever, there's just a steep learning curve.

  13. A female POV.. by selloutvixen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is actually a current problem of my current SO (and avid slashdotter) with Ragnarok Online. Don't get me wrong, I am such a gaming chick. I've been known to spend long periods of time glued to my laptop til the wee hours of the morning. However, he plays during the day while I'm at work, then wants to play all night as well. It's a &*^%@&^%& battle to tear him away from the computer to do something other than slay anime monsters. It won't do anything to seriously jeopardize our relationship, but damn, it's annoying. I work for sometimes 10 hours days staring at a computer.. do I really want to drive an hour home, then stare at a computer RIGHT away til 5am? Not likely. And a previous poster then said making your girlfriend feel like 2nd place is bad.. they were dead-on. Compromise with her. Watch a girlie chick flick with her in exchange for some game time, or stay with her til she falls asleep, play for a bit, then return and sleep yourself. If she really knows you and your geeky gaming addicition, she can't get TOO mad.

  14. Wrong Forum, Indeed by jazman_777 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    now we're all pretty addicted and want to play together online all the time.

    You admit you're addicted, that you want to play this game all the time, but the girlfriend is the problem?! Where's Dr. Phil?

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  15. People ARE second place in my life. by solios · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course, I'm not blowing 20 hours a week on video games, I'm spending it in the myriad stages of graphic novel production. Time for it has to come from somewhere- out went video games, out went movies. I do those when I'm too burned out from writing, pencilling, inking, coloring to do anything else.

    Oh yeah, and there's the day job. Combine that with the graphic novel and I have about six hours of free time a week. Broke up with the girl I was dating the week I started the project in earnest. I told her I had finally started work on the thing- which I have been planning since 1994- and her response wasn't "sweet!" or "nice!" or "it's good that you're starting to realize your dreams!", it was "I'M NOT TAKING A BACK SEAT TO SOME STUPID WEBCOMIC!"

    And so, quite suddenly, she wasn't.

    When I'm 40, my memories of my mid twenties will be a haze of production striving to pull together a story that has been taking shape in my head for ten years. I will have ACCOMPLISHED something, rather than suffering the tyranny of an ice queen who wanted my creative energies for herself.

    Fortunately, the woman I'm half-dating now understands exactly where I'm coming from (she's a writer)- and has caught more than a few typos.

    If you have to sacrifice something you love, then it's pretty obvious that there's a more compatible girl out there.

  16. It's just a game! by WndrBr3d · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I personally spend a lot of time playing Magic: The Gathering Online and at the same time, have a SO as well.

    I find that in the long run, the SO is much more important to me than any game will ever be, no matter how powerful/how much money/how much time I spend playing it.

    A game should be just that, a game.

    I think when you find a game or virtual activity getting in the way of real life friendships (let alone relationships), you probably have an addiction problem.

  17. Get a better girlfriend by Mouse42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously, you need a better girlfriend.

    Of course there needs to be a balance between time you spend with your friends doing fun stuff and time spent with your SO doing fun stuff, but it shouldn't take an enormous amount of effort to balance. It should come naturally, and when possible, the two worlds should overlap.

    If gaming is important to you, than you need to find a girlfriend who enjoys gaming, too, and will join you. This is important, because later on, when you're married, this will cause problems. She could expect you to "grow up" and stop doing "childish" things.

    An IT manager showed some obvious interest in me. I decided to pursue this for at least a friendship, because I can always use another gaming friend and movie buff to hang with. I later find out he thinks I'm perfect and never imagined a girl like me could exist. I'm a geeky hot chick who shares all his interests. He makes it obvious he wants more from me.

    I THEN find out the guy is married! Turns out he's so smitten he was actually considering having an affair. Of course I put a stop to that dream.

    My whole point is, the guy had no concept that a woman like me existed, so instead he settled for a nice woman who put up with him and lets him get laid every once and awhile. Obviously, he isn't happy with this, and his mind is wondering to other, seemingly better prospects.

    If the girl you are with cannot handle your hobbies, and refuses to join you with your hobbies, than you are with the wrong woman for you. There is someone better out there.

    (You may need to wait 10+ years before you can find her, but she's out there)

  18. Re:How I find time to play with my baby daughter by djdavetrouble · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is of course a ridiculous item, so I couldnt resist. I have 2 kids and a wife. I was born in 1969 and grew up skateboarding and playing video games. I don't skate anymore, but I love videogames still. Most jobs I have had (IT dept) have had after work / last hour tournaments, my current job is the exception.

    Well, I am still addicted to FPS games, and I just stay up a few hours after everyone else goes to bed. That is my time, and I can do whatever the fuck I want to do with it. I have all of 2 pastimes, collecting and djing music and fragging tanks in bzflag. All of my remaining time goes to work and raising 2 kids.

    If you are having a problem with your SO, maybe it is because you expect to be able to play whenever you feel like sitting down at your deck. You need to structure your time and make sure that you pay sufficient attention to you SO. Make sure you respect each other's free time, by speaking about it. Don't just disappear into the computer right after dinner. Communication will get to the bottom of your issue.

    You may have been joking about zoo tycoon, but that game just sounds LAME. Do you even know what kind of games she likes? When my wife was pregnant I bought Hoyle Board Games 2003 so she could play mahjongg to her hearts content. Lots of women enjoy the Sims from what I know, and the above poster is lucky enough to have a wife that plays Quake 3. Now THATS hot! Anyway, either try to involve her in your hobby (who knows it may even be fun) or find her a game she can enjoy.

    As soon as my kids are old enough you can bet that we'll be going head to head on our playstation 3. I've been waiting years to frag the little rugrats ! Also considering buying dance dance revolution since we all enjoy dancing, and it could be a real fun family activity.

    --
    music lover since 1969
  19. Re:Wrong crowd... by carlos_benj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I beg to differ. Just because there is a segment of the community that the joke doesn't apply to does not mean that there cannot be a stereotypical /. user that you can joke about. It's about the image, not the reality.

    I'm having difficulty with your second assertion. Just how does the use of backspace end up being equivalent to an "All Your Base" joke? Granted he was making a "nerds don't have girlfriends" joke, but the use of the backspace in this instance says, "Why are you asking me.... Oh wait! I mean why are you asking them?" and it becomes self-deprecating humor. I believe you may have missed that since people who take themselves too seriously often don't understand that type of humor.

    --

    --

    As a matter of fact, I am a lawyer. But I play an actor on TV.

  20. Bah. by lilibat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You are making it sound like all gamer girls play is Sims. Some of us play the same games boys do.

    --
    ~ lilibat gamer geek goth girl
  21. Re:How's the parent rate a "funny" ? by solios · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Alternatively, you need a couple of good ones to recognize a bad one for what it is and get out before you sustain too much Damage. I've seen many friends of mine be all DOOD I SUCK I'M LONELY I JUST WANT A GIRLFRIEND and then they GET one and do absolutely anything she demands because they are very, VERY afraid she'll up and leave if they don't comply.

    Leaving your dirty underwear on the pillows is one thing. A girl goading you into changing your hairstyle, lifestyle, POSITION IN LIFE, etceteras, is NOT someone who's going to make you happy. At all. Ever. Women and boys are like Linux geeks and Linux- they see a lot of things they want to change and approach the guy from a standpoint of Potential, as opposed to what he Actually Is- and they set about to make changes. This in and of itself seems to be an inherent compulsion (in my experience and observation), and how (badly) it manifests depends largely on the woman's personality.

    Marrying the first girl who's willing to have sex with you is not a recipe for success- surviving a handful of relationships will teach you what you want out of one, what you need to change about yourself, and what you shouldn't change about yourself.

    Oddly enough, relationships are like video games in the standpoint that the more you "play" them, the "better" you get at them.

  22. Definitely. by cyberwench · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Frankly, I'm the only one in the house who ever finishes our games. My husband buys them, for the most part, but I'm the one who actually plays them all the way through. Personally, I can't stand The Sims - I'm up for just about anything else though. We met in-game, and we've played together consistently over the years - started in EQ, went to DAoC, now City of Heroes... and all the off-line games in-between. He can beat me on some of the fighting games (I still rule DOA though), and I kick his ass in strategy. I think, counting back, that I've actually been playing games longer than he has. My whole family played together (ok, minus my Mom) and so I think we got an early start on being able to balance games with life.

    Admittedly, it's not like you can expect whoever you fall for to have the same interests... so for the standard reality-check - make sure your girl's getting enough time, and that your gaming isn't taking away from your relationship... then Hero away. A couple other things to remember:

    1) The game will be there when you go back. If life's calling, hang up on the game... so maybe you lose some exp, or you annoy your group - there are far worse things to lose than that.

    2) Try to make sure that you're not losing time - telling someone you'll be home (or will meet them, pick them up, etc.) "in an hour" and coming home three hours later is being an ass no matter what you were doing. I used to be terrible about that.

    3) Take care of your responsibilities out-of-game. The game is more likely to be the focus of anger for your partner if you're not doing your share of housework, food prep, dog feeding, all that stuff. (It also means that your gaming time is much less likely to be interrupted with timed demands to do chores.)

    Good luck, and it is possible. :)

    --
    ~ Leilah