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An Uncommon Gaming Addiction.
Franksmall
Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Hello,

My name is Frank Anderson and I have a problem. You see, last year I quit my job at GameStop to join a Master's program to become a middle school teacher. At the time I joined, I knew that the year the program required of me would keep me out of work and that I would have to tighten up my spending. I also knew that the most likely, and most disposable of my spending, came from buying video games and movies.

Over the last year I have done an excellent job of cutting my spending on movies, but my spending on games has increased.

Taken individually, my gaming purchases seem rather savvy. Six “free” five-dollar games from GoHastings.com. All I had to pay was the $2.75 shipping fee for each game. Four games from Gamefly’s day-long sales at around $10 a pop. NBA Jam for the Xbox 360 for only $25. Sonic Colors and Donkey Kong Country for only $38 out-of-pocket. 007 Bloodstone and Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit for only $38 total since I had $35 in-store credit and they were both on sale for $34.

The problem comes in when I start taking advantage of all of those deals, rather than just buying the games I have time to play right now. When you add onto that list the games I have bought through Amazon, which I justify by telling myself the $20 Gamer Credit I received for each really only makes them $40 games and the titles I already had preordered at GameStop…. Well, you might have an idea of just how many games I have been buying lately.

My gaming purchases ramped up a few years ago when I got a job reviewing games for my local paper. The funds that I received from that job paid for most of the games I bought, and I had to buy games to review games. The more games I bought then the more I could play and write about. It was a cycle that repeated for almost three years. I got used to being able to play almost every major release that came out and my preorder list continued to grow. I had worked out a grandiose scheme of buying games, reviewing them, and then trading in the titles I didn’t love to buy more games that had me spending very little out-of-pocket money on most of the games I was playing.

Once the paper I wrote for decided to move away from using local freelance writers to using centralized writers I lost my writing gig, but the games purchases continued. Luckily, I had been preordering and paying off games for so long with my writing money that I had many of the next year’s major titles fully paid.

Over time those games have all come out, but my purchasing habits have not slowed down. Now, with sites like Cheapassgamer.com giving me quick access to the best sales available, I sometimes get a feeling of compulsion to buy a game when it is significantly on sale… even if it is not a game that I am fully interested in playing.

If I was single and the only person my spending affected was myself then I would not be as concerned about my habits. Since I have a wife and child, however, I have to find a way to become more conscientious of my spending. Add on top of that the fact that my wife is now moving from her current job to a new job with a much better company, but that pays less, and you see what things have got to change.

I know a lot of you are probably reading this with scorn, and I do find this situation more than a bit embarrassing. This problem seems like one that should be quick and easy to fix, and maybe it will be. I am trying to come up with a plan to curb my games spending, and more than likely that will force me to completely quit buying games. At least for the a period of time that it takes for my compulsions to stop. The problem is getting the will to actually move into that phase. The biggest thing I do not want to happen is for my compulsion to get so bad that I start spending more of my savings than I already am having to since I am not working.

You know, change can be a scary thing. I think my biggest fear about buying less (or no) games is feeling left out of the gaming dialog. I have already had my time access to gaming culture significantly cut by my decision to better my life by becoming a teacher. I know a part of me deeply fears having to live life not being able to competently comment on the big stories happening in the gaming world. My knowledge and experience has always been a major part of my pride as a gamer. I might not be the best at online multiplayer, but there is a good chance that I have a deeper knowledge base about gaming than 99% of the populace… simply because I play almost every major title that comes out.

Not having that feeling of pride will take some getting used to, and maybe I will find that I can get just as much pride from being able to spend more time with the games I already have and playing them to their fullest potential. Still, I know that these fears are just excuses to not being to process of change. If everyone let their fears rule their actions then nobody would ever get anything done. So, in that spirit a new era begins…. Now!

Does anyone else have a situation like this or know someone who has? Does anyone have any advice, comments, or criticisms to share? Please, be brutal. I think I may need a bit of tough-love to help solidify my will to change.

 
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Comments (13)
There184
December 14, 2010


Sounds like someone needs to Talk to Frank. http://www.talktofrank.com/section.aspx?ID=110



Sorry...


Franksmall
December 14, 2010


HA! Where did you find that? That is hilarous!


There184
December 14, 2010


It's a British drugs PSA.



You must have a lot of achievements and trophies to get, right? That'd take some time that could be spent on expensive new games.


Franksmall
December 14, 2010


Thats a great idea! I have never been too into Achievements, but I imagine if I started actually looking at them more that I could get wrapped up into them. Thanks!


Photo-1
December 14, 2010


I know how you feel.. I was the same way in high school, when I had more disposable income than I knew what to do with. Actually, I knew exactly what to do with it - I spent it on games. And now my pile of shame is bigger than ever. I almost never get to play the games I want because I'm so busy, but a combination of a Gamefly account and a MUCH tighter budget has allowed me to overcome the "addiction." Now I hardly buy any games at all. One day I hope to reach a manageable middle ground.


Me
December 14, 2010


I can sympathise with this, Frank. When I was in sixth form I had a lot of money and little expenses, and my backlog quickly built up. When my budget tightened in University, awesome Steam sales began to crop up, and I once again found myself buying something when it was reduced by 50%. As you can imagine, even today most of these games went unplayed.



I actually felt like I was addicted to giving them my money. Today's Steam sale of Metro 2033 for £4.99 has tempted me to spend more money (which I can't realistically afford), but I've managed to refrain because I know I won't play it, or merely play the first five minutes and put it down, never to play again because newer titles have cropped up.



I still have Vanquish and Alpha Protocol in their factory packaging because my backlog is so full. Just gotta finish Deadly Premonition first...


John-wayne-rooster-cogburn
December 14, 2010


One thing that's helped me is giving myself a small allowance. I usually give myself about $40 a month to spend on whatever I want (usually games). I only buy games that I know I'm going to play, because I have such a small budget. I think it's great that you're looking at the current deals, as stretching out your money will allow you to make more game purchases.



With that said, however, one of the best things to do is remove yourself from reading and hearing about the newest games. If you don't know about them, then you won't want them. It's easier said than done, trust me. Also, your wife and child are much more important than video games. Don't put them in financial distress!


Default_picture
December 14, 2010


It's not about games. It's a part of being a guy. I've seen this with music and gadgets, too. You might compare it to alcoholism. All men are alcoholics in one way or another. My alcohol is playing video games.



A basic thing to do is be honest with your wife. But, the most important thing to do is to pray to God for help. That's how my Dad beat his alcohol, which was beer! :)


Default_picture
December 14, 2010


Like you said...  It's an addiction.  I'm not sure if it's videogame related or more consumption problem.  



In fact, I think that you just don't want to growth up.  We growth up with video game but at some point with more responsibility we don't have so much time to play...  I feel that I don't enjoy game like before in a sense of I cannot invest as much time and energy...  So It like a race to finish the game instead of enjoying it...  so to have this "enjoying" feeling again I compensate by buying more game thinking that at some point I will have this feeling again...  But the thing is just...  I don't have time anymore.  So, I don't know, like every addiction, I think that control is the key, and for that, game must take less and less space in my life...  



So I just put more energy to have quality time with my fiancée and I don't miss game so much... I still play but I realize that videogame it's just a way to refuse the reality that ...  It's just game... like dolls and cars...

Bmob
December 14, 2010


I always feel like I have way too many games, and perhaps I do, but my brother quite overshadows my 'accomplishments'. He has about 300 Xbox 360 games. The to-the-ceiling towers they've formed in the corner impose themselves upon you as soon as you enter the room, and half of them remain unplayed.



He recognised that he was spending too much money on them, so he started collecting playstation games. The bargains which prompted his heavy spending were everywhere, and although he was still buying as many games - if not, more - he was spending less.



The thing is, these games weren't new; they weren't must haves; there was nothing convincing him that he had to buy them, and his spending dropped considerably. By trimming the media fat and getting down to the base-instinct of bargain-hunting, the 'great deals' lost a lot of their allure.


10831_319453355346_603410346_9613365_6156405_n
December 15, 2010


With my backlog at close to 30 games, I have little trouble convincing myself that it's a bad idea to buy new games.... Well, most of the time -- I do cave on the occasional sale and sometimes suffer "what if it goes out of print" panic.


N712711743_851007_3478
December 15, 2010


I know exactly what boat you're rowing, Frank.



I have three kids, a mortgage, a car payment and student loans to pay.  Eventually you're going to have to rethink your strategy when it comes to gaming.



Like Chris up above me there, I too have a set spending limit every month which helps me to streamline and think hard about what games I want to purchase.  Most times, if you wait just a few months, you can get new games for relatively cheap since they have an expiration date as constraining as milk.  And I practically live by GameFly these days; there's absolutely no excuse not to use it.



But I think more than money saving strategies, I think you need to reevaluate how you view gaming in general.  I had a really hard time letting go of being able to play all the newest games in fear of not keeping up with the Jones'.  But you know what?  It's easier to keeping abreast of things when you have less to play.  I read and listen to podcasts which makes me feel like I'm in the know even though I'm really not.  A lovely side-effect to having less is that you begin to appreciate games on a deeper level, sort of like we did when we were kids.  And you being able to finish games is worth more to cultural conversation than dabbling in a multitude of them.



And most importantly, don't feel like a dolt because of how you feel.  We all go through it.  The one thing that got me over the hump?  Remember that gaming doesn't define who I am; it's just what I do.


Franksmall
December 15, 2010


Matthew- The worst part about this year was that I HAD Gamefly the whole friggin year. It was supposed to be my route to buying less games, but I pretty much just used it to rent games I was interested in but would never buy. Amazon's game credits for preordering games really threw me off this year. I started the year with a great selection of games reserved and mostly paid for at GameStop, but kept moving the credit to other games and ordering titles through Amazon. It spread out my spending a lot more than I thought... and beyond that it was just kind of stupid.



The most surprisin thing about this piece has been the response. Both here and at N4G I have had a ton of "I have the same problem" type posts, or at least people who understand. I really didn't expect that to happen at all!



One game I really wanted to get, but passed on at first was Dead Rising 2. Now that I picked it up for $20 through Gamefly, I find that I am enjoying the game immensely AND feel great that I didn't pay full price for it.



I have always thought buying games early was a way to support the development houses that I love... but I think I am going to have to transfer to a mentality of "me first."



I have also started making sure I am playing a game to beat it, not just playing them enough that I feel ok moving on to the next game. Beating Assassin's Creed Brotherhood and Fable 3 over the last two weeks of being free from school has felt great... I just wish my compulsions didn't have me buying up games "because the deal is just too good to pass up."



I am making some progress, and think writing this post will really help me stick to my guns.



Fingers crossed!!


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