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Thursday, March 14, 2019

PUBG: Value for time?

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We have all at one point or another suffered long periods of gamers rage, frustration and plain white anger, while playing the most popular Battle Royal game in the world. Usually it ends when a gamer uninstalls the game and then moments later when the anger wears off, they install PUBG again and the whole process begins once more. There is something that is just so deliciously addictive about PUBG that it doesn’t let go.
The addiction is real, good people with degrees and jobs, waste endless hours trying to get their Chicken Dinner. Ultimately, if you aren’t the best PUBG player in the world, you too will go through the gamers rage that most PUBG players suffer on a daily basis. You’d think that you’ve almost won, you’re excited, lying in the grass looking for the slightest movement and then the next second you’re dead without a clue as to how you got spotted, or how you died on a one on one first (with me it’s usually the latter).
I’m not the first to say this but the game more often than not seems unfair. It may be just bias, a strong desire to win and dominate, but most times when it comes to a one on one, specially close range, we often have to face defeat, and are left clenching our hair as to how the opponent got away all the while we were aiming and successfully firing on the face. There are times I’ve taken down entire squads (luckily due to their lack of intelligence) with a Tommy Gun, and there have been times I’ve started firing on a single opponent first and ended up dead quicker than a Pochinki lover. And those are just problems that my colleagues and I face.
PUBG is on of the best games in the world, right now and the future. My problem with the game is that the amount of time you spend playing the games doesn’t balance the pleasurable experience and the unpleasantness. The more you play the game the more you seem to lose to the above mentioned problems and more. And as a gamer nobody likes to lose to what they think is unfair (your temper gets high enough when you lose a fair fight). There really isn’t an argument against this. You could say that raging and ranting is wrong and just plain stupid but that’s the way gamers are built. Low key, PUBG should look into the matter that concerns it’s players and discourages people to play further not just for consumer retention but to complete their original objective of providing on of the best gaming experiences felt, recognized and cherished globally.

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