| Hey, A bit of context.. So I think last week was my last straw, I hit 8k hours with
dota and holy ** It finally hit me how much time I wasted
on that game. I'm a software developer, I always wanted to develop
something and put it out but was scared shitless to do so, I
was kinda afraid to get bad traction, to fail or even worse
to be completely ignored. so I decided to address two of these issues at once, stop
playing dota and spend the weekend building a website that
let you see what you could've done with your gaming hours. As an avid gamer for the last 20+ years, I know that it's
only theoretical, cause sometimes, after a long day u just
wanna chill infront of a game and you wouldn't go get a pilot
license, obviously. but, a lot of other times, I would spend my days off,
weekend, just gaming 10 hours straight like a mad man. In any case, hope u like it and maybe it sparks something in u! |
I don't agree that leisure is inherently wasting time, which I think is a pretty common belief across North America in general and within Tech specifically. I don't know if that's what you're asserting, but it does seem to be the thesis of the backing site ("if you spent all this time that you spent on a leisure activity elsewhere, you could have XYZ 'better' skill!")
Of course, all things in balance; gaming addiction is a thing, and I've absolutely been guilty of using Titanfall 2 to farm dopamine rather than taking my dog for a walk or tidying my room.
I'm glad this helped you, but I already feel like my life is under enough pressure to be more efficient, more productive, have more of an impact, when I'd really just like to slow down and enjoy things more.
(I'm also a little sad, I originally thought this would map time spent in a game to a _corresponding_ skill, e.g. "400 hours in space engineers" -> "level 5 systems architect," or something. That's on me, it's not a criticism, but it's influencing my disappointment.)