Nowadays it can be hard to turn without bumping into an opinion about a video game or some aspect related to video games. On forums, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, gaming sites, and so on, there is a plethora of comments. But sometimes it can seem many of these run the same way, with consensus forming, and a minority getting drowned out or being dragged.
But it can feel good, even liberating, to express some deeply held feeling, without too much judgement; to be given a safe space to confess your truest thoughts, ideas, and emotions. Over on the popular Gaming subreddit, a thread invited people to share their video game "confession" with the OP kicking things off by saying that they hadn't played a new Zelda game since Twilight Princess on the GameCube. This prompted a raft of strong feelings that might otherwise have been never expressed.
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"I have a lot of games with zero to less than an hour of play", commented one, in a confession that might have many modern gamers nodding in recognition. "And I'm still buying new games. Although with less frequency than before and usually on sale."
What's your video game 'confession'?
by u/AndyKaufmanSentMe in gaming
Another made a confesison that would surely get roasted if in another forum. "I found RDR tedious", they commented. This generated some sympathy with another agreeing that Rockstar's oft-referred to masterpiece was super slow in terms of pacing, while yet another even disliked how such games are considered by the masses to be classics. "This goes for most games Redditors describe as 'masterpieces'", they wrote. "I've been duped multiple times by various games' wild popularity, only to be
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