TectonicSuperPlates
Learn to draw the Rob Liefeld way
I felt like this was the best thread to ask this question.
I love fighting games, but I have always been a casual player. Never really cared to dive into the big time combo strings and timing focus and all that jazz. I just thought it was fun to button mash and hopefully pull out a win. And if I did, well that was fantastic.
When I began playing Injustice and I joined the TYM community, I wanted to put in an effort to try and get better. To stop button mashing and actually learn how to play the game. Learn the technicality of the game. Learn the characters and how they work. All in all, I wanted to become a better player because I enjoyed Injustice and I wanted to put in the time and effort to get better.
However, the more and more I try to learn the big time combos, the more time and work I put into it, the more that work feels like a chore than a fun experience. It doesn't feel like I am rewarding myself putting the time into practicing these combos. It feels like, if I want to stay relevant in this game, I need to learn these combos.
It feels more like a task that must be completed. And when I feel like I have progressed, that I have actually learned something, there is someone out there better than me who reminds me that I have learned nothing. Or moreso, that my time that I put into trying to learn these combos feels like it was wasted. That I didn't progress anywhere.
I'm sure a lot of you, when you first entered into fighters, probably thought or felt the same way I do. Any tips on what I can do to make the experience feel more fun than just a tedious and daunting task? Because that's how I feel right now when trying to learn and practice these combos.
I'm not gonna say that I don't think I have progressed at all, but I will say that that progression felt very tedious. And if I feel like I am forcing myself to learn combos just to stay relevant in this game, to be able to play others online, I don't know how much more enjoyment I will get out of the game.
I'm sure there is nothing that someone does(perhaps a job to put food on the table), that if it feels tedious to them, they won't continue to do it. Especially something like a hobby. Forcing yourself to accomplish something... it just, it doesn't feel right. You want to accomplish something because it is fun and rewarding. Because you want to do it. Not because it feels mandatory to do it. And I want to learn these combos, but it feels more mandatory to learn them than just learning them because I want to learn them. You get me? And, in general, if you feel like forcing yourself to try and accomplish something just because you feel like you have/need to, your enthusiasm and input to try and accomplish it dwindles slowly but surely.
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tl;dr - How do I make learning combos in Injustice feel more fun than just a tedious task to stay relevant in the game and against other players?
I love fighting games, but I have always been a casual player. Never really cared to dive into the big time combo strings and timing focus and all that jazz. I just thought it was fun to button mash and hopefully pull out a win. And if I did, well that was fantastic.
When I began playing Injustice and I joined the TYM community, I wanted to put in an effort to try and get better. To stop button mashing and actually learn how to play the game. Learn the technicality of the game. Learn the characters and how they work. All in all, I wanted to become a better player because I enjoyed Injustice and I wanted to put in the time and effort to get better.
However, the more and more I try to learn the big time combos, the more time and work I put into it, the more that work feels like a chore than a fun experience. It doesn't feel like I am rewarding myself putting the time into practicing these combos. It feels like, if I want to stay relevant in this game, I need to learn these combos.
It feels more like a task that must be completed. And when I feel like I have progressed, that I have actually learned something, there is someone out there better than me who reminds me that I have learned nothing. Or moreso, that my time that I put into trying to learn these combos feels like it was wasted. That I didn't progress anywhere.
I'm sure a lot of you, when you first entered into fighters, probably thought or felt the same way I do. Any tips on what I can do to make the experience feel more fun than just a tedious and daunting task? Because that's how I feel right now when trying to learn and practice these combos.
I'm not gonna say that I don't think I have progressed at all, but I will say that that progression felt very tedious. And if I feel like I am forcing myself to learn combos just to stay relevant in this game, to be able to play others online, I don't know how much more enjoyment I will get out of the game.
I'm sure there is nothing that someone does(perhaps a job to put food on the table), that if it feels tedious to them, they won't continue to do it. Especially something like a hobby. Forcing yourself to accomplish something... it just, it doesn't feel right. You want to accomplish something because it is fun and rewarding. Because you want to do it. Not because it feels mandatory to do it. And I want to learn these combos, but it feels more mandatory to learn them than just learning them because I want to learn them. You get me? And, in general, if you feel like forcing yourself to try and accomplish something just because you feel like you have/need to, your enthusiasm and input to try and accomplish it dwindles slowly but surely.
--
tl;dr - How do I make learning combos in Injustice feel more fun than just a tedious task to stay relevant in the game and against other players?