There are pros and cons for either demographic: whilst being older may be ideal since not only you bypass age restrictions, you also have the capability on purchasing it with your own money without having to ask parents for that given that you have employment and recurring income. Gaming as a kid gives more time without having to dwell much on responsibilities that adults have to worry about but at the same time are held by school.
- warmaster@lemmy.worldEnglish14 minutes
When you’ve played it all, and you’re short on free time, unique gameplay that matches your tastes is harder to find.
- dom@lemmy.caEnglish48 minutes
Way different experience. As a kid for me i loved the sense of discovery and getting lost in a world.
As an adult, I love games that make me think and plan.
Both great for different reasons
- CADmonkey@lemmy.worldEnglish33 minutes
Time to game!
Grabs scratch paper, pencil, and calculator
Opens Satisfactory
- CADmonkey@lemmy.worldEnglish34 minutes
That’s hard for me to answer. I have more fun now than I did as a kid, but the games are different.
When I was a kid, Simcity 2000 with 256 color VGA graphics was the cutting edge.
Now in this future space year of 2026, there are factory games, RPG’s with full voice acting and character animations, games where you can work on cars or farm crops or check paperwork. There are point and click games that work like Monkey Island, only they’re pornographic. Instead of monsters in Doom falling in a sprite of chunks, I can see them chainsawed apart or curb stomped. I can build rockets whether they work or not. I can be a robot driving a boat, powering up old infrastructure and scrapping junk to build machines, when I’m not dodging sharks with freakin’ lasers on their heads.
Tl;Dr: Its hard for me to tell if I am having more fun gaming as an adult, or the games are just better now.
- atrielienz@lemmy.worldEnglish5 hours
As an adult I finish more games. I have more patience and there’s a lot of things that are better today than when I was a kid (level scaling/difficulty scaling is definitely one, and so is the art).
But I miss storytelling. I miss game mechanics that worked really well but we’re based on the limitations of the hardware and software available at the time. I miss having to explore because there were no walkthroughs or guides or anything.
So I think perhaps gaming has gotten better, but my experience with gaming isn’t as good now as it was when I was a kid because I have something to compare it to and it can’t beat my nostalgia.
- dogslayeggs@lemmy.worldEnglish6 hours
It’s a tough question to answer, since we can’t go forward in time and game as a kid with the games we have now. And playing games now that we had when we were kids is different, since you already know all about them. I think I have to answer “as a kid,” though.
As a kid, we had a sense of wonder about all the new things we were unlocking. But how much of that was just being a kid and how much was the still-evolving game industry finding new ways to be exciting? Playing games now feels insane to me, because I grew up being astonished by Galaga and Pac-Man. Comparing those to Elden Ring, which is graphically and difficulty-wise and story-wise light years ahead, just doesn’t make sense. At the same time, I don’t know that I could have gained much from playing Elden Ring as a kid. For one, I would have been destroyed by the first enemy and turned away crying… not that different as an adult if I’m honest. But I probably played as much Super Mario Bros as I did Elden Ring.
I’m lucky that I have time to game as an adult. Sure, it’s only about 3 to 5 hours per week, but that’s better than a lot of adults. Some weekends I’ll get 10 or 15 hours to game. As a kid I could play for hours a day. I could have friends over most days after school to game with. They could spend the night on weekends to play late. I could borrow their games, and they could borrow mine, so I usually had a new game to try even if I didn’t have my own money.
- anamethatisnt@sopuli.xyzEnglish13 hours
Honestly the thing I feel that kids have in their corner that is really great is a lack of experience.
The kind of awe that I felt when I started up Starcraft or Diablo for the first time just isn’t there now, I have too many reference points from earlier games to get that “new and awesome”-feeling from most games anymore.- lyralycan@sh.itjust.worksEnglish2 hours
I decided to have high moral standards, and now I’m constantly burned out by checking if the publisher or development team’s owner is fucking over some people, either by enforcing patch updates (small hill but I’ll die defending my right to glitch out of playable areas), employee overworking, prioritising shareholder profit over fun factor, gatekeeping based on identity or political influence etc. As a kid I had no worries and could play games built by EA, Epic or Bohemia Interactive without thinking about how they profit off American wars.
BurntWits@sh.itjust.worksEnglish
5 hoursI hadn’t felt that feeling in many years, until I played Elden Ring’s DLC. It was the first time since being a kid that I felt a true sense of awe and wonder. I wish I could relive that feeling again.
Shellofbiomatter@lemmus.orgEnglish
12 hours“fresh meat” and then just getting insta killed. It still sends shivers down my spine. Such a sweet childhood memory.
- leave_it_blank@lemmy.worldEnglish11 hours
I remember Cyberpunk 2077 sucking me into its world, I sometimes walked slowly through the streets taking in sights and sounds.
I had that all the time as a kid, Monkey Island, Betrayal at Krondor, you name it. For children, like you said, everything is new and a fantastic experience, give it enough years and it becomes not stale, but normal.
Now, many years later it has become rare. But when it happens it’s awesome again.
That’s also my reason for not being excited over GTA 6. It will never live up to feeling of 3, Vice City or San Andreas, even 4. Those times are over for me. 5 was fun, but nothing special anymore.
- TORFdot0@lemmy.worldEnglish10 hours
The pros of gaming as an adult is that you now have the money to go buy all the games you wanted to play as a kid. The cons are that you no longer have the time.
I have to say that the lack of responsibility and abundance of time makes gaming as a kid better.
- 9 hours
I mean when i was a kid i struggled to get double digit fps in ironforge, but now i struggle to get that same sense of wonder from ul’dah. But also i actually have more than three games so i pick adulthood
- 12 hours
Personally, gaming was a much bigger deal to me as a kid. I still play as an adult, but they just don’t evoke the same feels as they did when I was young. Probably doesn’t help that I am stressed, tired, and have a million obligations distracting me, but that’s adulthood for you. A lot of the time, I find something like a hike or bike ride more rewarding than games these days.
- Nightsoul@lemmy.worldEnglish9 hours
College Adult, growing up my parents only let me play games on the weekends and even then it was rare that I could play for longer then like 2 hours. Most my crazy long gaming sessions occurred when I was at a friend’s house and it turned into an obsession because of how much I was limited.
You should add a third category, cause I had the best time playing games in college. So many late night gaming sessions with friends, and while I didn’t have money to buy many games, there were ways to obtain them.
As an adult I have more money and pretty good at balancing gaming with everything else, but it’s mostly solo gaming because friends I would play with in college are also busy all the time
- yermaw@sh.itjust.worksEnglish8 hours
Thats the correct. Young adulthood.
Too young to be a real man, and too old to hang with the kids, but enough job money and time to afford any game you want and all the time to play it.
64bithero@lemmy.worldEnglish
11 hoursAs a kid I had time play games but no money to buy games. As an adult I have money to buy games but time to play games …
- rozodru@piefed.worldEnglish10 hours
I think gaming as a kid was better simply because of the fact there was a bit of mystery to it.
you rarely knew about upcoming game releases unless it was a major title or was heavily advertised in like GamePro or EGM. most of the time you’d go to the store or a rental place and you’d discover a game right there on the shelf. Some of my favourite games I never knew existed until I rented them from Blockbuster. And many times recommendations game from previously said magazines or word of mouth via your friends. And if a game was cancelled prior to release chances are you wouldn’t be bummed about it simply because you probably didn’t know it existed in the first place.
We don’t have that now. now everything is covered from head to toe everywhere or in early access or whatever. takes the fun out of it.
Also there was nothing better than picking up a game and reading the manual on the drive home.
- placebo@lemmy.zipEnglish11 hours
As you said, there are pros and cons. A child’s brain is something else, I remember excitement and curiosity that an adult’s brain just cannot replicate. I don’t think I’ll ever feel what I felt when I played Half-Life or World of Warcraft for the first time. Games are still enjoyable though - just in a different way.
- thiscat@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish10 hours
i think it depends on your circumstances in life more then anything else






