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When have video games influenced your perception of real life?

By this, I mean that thing that happens when you play a game for so long that your mind warps and starts applying video game mechanics to your day-to-day life.

A few examples from my personal experience:

-Playing Rock Band/Guitar Hero and watching the note-track moving towards the screen to the point that when you stop, the ground seems to move away from you. Or you "see" a note-track when listening to a song outside the game


-The Sims' Comfort/Food/Social/etc meters pop in your head when you're chilling/hungry/hanging with people/etc

-Playing Baldur's Gate 3 for tens of hours, then telling a joke amongst your friends and seeing a "[Friend] liked that" notification pop up in your mind's eye

Apologies to all my aphantasia bros/sisters out there. But maybe this manifests for you in a different way?

I know I can't be the only one this happens to. Anybody else have any examples from their experience?

Edit: Punished Miku Punished Miku reminded me this is also known as "The Tetris Effect"

 
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AV

We ain't outta here in ten minutes, we won't need no rocket to fly through space
Spending a day levelling herbalism or just farming herbs in WoW, to then go outside the next day and have a heart attack when a real flower looks like a rare herb.
 

deriks

4-Time GIF/Meme God
The Sims= you need good stuff to live well, but you need to work, not to cheat... you fuck
Metal Gear Rising= politicians are shitty and everything is around money. Deal with it or die
Last of Us= you to live, someone has to die
 

Big Baller

Al Pachinko, Konami President
Canadian Wow GIF by DJ Khaled
 
No, I know the difference between a game and reality
Wow, your brain doesn't attenuate to sensory input like with the Rock Band example?

Must be hard living life always feeling the clothes you're wearing, the hairs on your head, contacts lenses on your eye, glasses on your face, etc.
 

Husky

THE Prey 2 fanatic
One time at my computer, I hit 3 or 4 on my keyboard to speed up time, like I do in The Sims games.
Many years ago, I'm pretty sure I tried to hit Q while I was outside, to open up my Skyrim quick menu.
 

Xcell Miguel

Gold Member
Happens to me very often, and as I do some 3D at work I tend to observe things differently, shaping in my head how they would be modeled in 3D, looking at the texture from different angles and how it reacts to lights.

Two years ago I played a lot of iRacing, and then when I drove my car and passing cars on the multi-lane roads I imagined the spotter in my head saying "car right", "clear right" 😂

I often think about the animals/insects I see with their Pokémon equivalent name.

I can relate The Sims needs meters, I use them too :D
EDIT : I also imagine The Sims' task queue squares sometimes when I go through several tasks
 
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cireza

Member
I don't really get the meters poping in your head when you get hungry.

Sure, there can be persistence in repetitive things that you have looked at, such as Rock Band scrolling lines. Or when you close your eyes (and actually even when you don't) things can persist. But it is not like a meter is going to suddenly pop because I told a joke.

At least that's how it is for me.
 
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I don't really get the meters poping in your head when you get hungry.

Sure, there can be persistence in repetitive things that you have looked at, such as Rock Band scrolling lines. Or when you close your eyes (and actually even when you don't) things can persist. But it is not like a meter is going to suddenly pop because I told a joke.

At least that's how it is for me.
Like someone else said, it's a sign of excessive gaming, imo. The BG3 example wasn't automatic for me like some of the other examples were. I was reminiscing and it came to mind.

Found this Reddit thread showing I'm not the only one where the meters thing has happened, at least:

 
I Dont Believe You Will Ferrell GIF


You're telling me that your day-to-day perception of reality would be totally and completely unchanged if you could go back and erase all instances of gaming from your memory? You never learned a fact, got interested in a topic, discovered a new framework of thinking because of a game?
 

Rien

Jelly Belly
I Dont Believe You Will Ferrell GIF


You're telling me that your day-to-day perception of reality would be totally and completely unchanged if you could go back and erase all instances of gaming from your memory? You never learned a fact, got interested in a topic, discovered a new framework of thinking because of a game?

Honestly no. I play videogames for a long ass time but it never slipped through in my reality.
I have this much more with music tbh. If you would erase all instances of music out of my life my day-to-day perception would drastically be different.
 

brian0057

Banned
The Tempenny Tower mission in Fallout 3 taught me a valueable lesson. Both by a character and by Bethesda.
Helping Roy Phillips get the ghouls into the tower because you were sure that it was the right thing to do. It was just some biggots in those apartments. The ghouls have every right they have.
After a few hours, I return. Only to find the tower infested and everone dead except for the ghouls. After this, every time I play an RPG, I pay attention to actions way more than what a character says. This is one of the games that hammered home the point of "actions speak louder than words" for me.

As for Bethesda, they give you bad Karma for killing Roy, so I can disregard their sense of morality. Killing that piece of shit was so satisfying in later playthroughs. I've never done that missions since. I just kill Roy on sight.
 
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Catphish

Member
No Man's Sky's procedural generation sent me on a field trip down the rabbit holes of quantum mechanics and simulation theory.

That was fun as hell. I've played thousands of games, but this was the first one that led me to question the nature of reality. (y)
 
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MudoSkills

Volcano High Alumnus (Cum Laude)
Only really with puzzle games. Happened with Tetris, Meteos, Lumnies - after a session whenever I looked at any screen I'd find my mind wandering, and I'd suddenly be playing the game in my head over whatever else I was looking at.

Also had something with Guitar Hero, where I'd sometimes hear a piece of music and think about how I would chart the song - but that was more intentional.
 

IAmRei

Member
Eversince final fantasy tactics, which gave me crictical thinking, and shenmue for my love to city strolling.

Maybe also zelda for my sense of adventure, helped me to open many possibilities for seeing things from other angles
 

BlackTron

Member
Teen years, I wanted the name for a real flying dinosaur but transposed it with "Aerodactyl", had a pep talk with myself after that one
 

Garnox

Member
Final Fantasy X for the impact on religious discourse.

Mass Effect for its ethical dilemmas presented and playing it during a time when I was escaping into the game to cope with the harsh realities of life at the time.
 

Mamofish

Member
Playing a lot of skyrim and then marveling at the sight of mountains in real life thinking "This is the highest resolution terrain I've ever seen".
 

E-Cat

Member
When in a spa as a kid, coming up for air to replenish health. Also thinking that the spa was Zora’s Domain and hearing the music.
 

Drizzlehell

Banned


This little scene had a very profound impact on my perception of altruism as a kid, and to this day, it genuinely makes me consider the potential consequences of my actions when interacting with strangers.
 

Puscifer

Member
Death Stranding

I got delayed in my playthrough and started it during COVID and combined with the commentary on social media and video game culture it really made me pull back on a lot of my attachment to the hobby and start enjoying the outdoors more.

I think this post says a lot about the feelings that the game made me confront, I didn't exactly quit gaming but it definitely became just a "thing" for me

 
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