I understand that analogy. I had a similar experience with Splatoon: I was addicted to it for several months then I stopped playing altogether when my studies started to pile up and… I haven't touched it since then because I feel like I would have to learn the new stages and weapons and felt like part of the charm was lost.Not a burden persay, but the thing with this game is you will have to invest time, thing is the more time extends, new players will have a higher hill to climb if you get my analogy
If you can invest time and are OK with a fluctuating skill base, why not
The game has characters that you will fall in love with, not just aesthetic wise but gameplay that really flows with said character
Listen if you're getting this for PC, drop $40 for reg edition unless you're really jonesing for 5 extra skins for the game and other Blizzard entries for the extra $20
Then just pull the trigger on Quick Play and Start learning
There will be days you'll do shit to make you feel like the best, then the next day like you forgot what the "W" key does
I was even thinking of trying Team Fortress 2 first so I could get used to K+M, but that game is even worse for newbies like me. I bought DOOM and forced me to play with keyboard and mouse, but I was missing my 360 controller all the time.
That is what I am seeing, many characters, each with their own playstyle. It seems so so cool.
As to investing time, well, it is hard to say. I would like to play a pair of matches before going to bed (that is what I said about Splatoon and the pair became ten), but I do not think I would be taking it too hard TBH.
I can imagine. Truth be told, I should be playing on console as all of us will be more equal, but the game is cheaper and I can play online for free…There are some classes that don't need fine mouse aiming like Winston and Symmetra, but yeah, most classes would be much harder to play. The Torbjorn turret damage was nerfed by 30% on console because controllers are much slower in reacting to the turret compared to the mouse.
I appreciate your recommendations (or warnings!). Thank you, gaffers.