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Wednesday 25 January 2012

Coping With

By Juan Sanchez


After you start with a game, do not let the pressure of staying in the game hinder you from doing the unthinkable: dying. A character dying in a game is inescapable at particular points, and unless you willingly let go of a lose-lose situation, you may run the risk of holding the game up for everyone else. It's like a game of chess. If it is checkmate - it's checkmate. Call it a day and start over. Whatever you do, don't hang around waiting for some spellbinding fairy to come to your rescue. Please let your personality die with dignity. There are some new Kinect Games like Star Wars you can apply these principle to.

On the same principle, you do not want to take dying personally. Remember that online gaming is still simply a game. A character that dies in a game isn't representative of your character as a person. Turn a death into learning experience. At the very least, you will learn your way around a web game by learning everything that you are not intended to do!

Above all else, make sure your computer has what is needed to maintain the prevailing pace of an online game. Don't try to play an online game with a slow PC or slow Internet connection. In fact , if you are still using dial up, find another hobby. A slow processor and connection will make sure instant death because other players are not going to kindly wait for their own defeat. They are going to squish you like a bug.

Hunt around for a PC that was built for online gaming and get a DSL or ISDN Web connection. You'll need a fast processor, a top quality graphics card, and a sound machine to match.

By following these easy recommendations, you will have passed the "newbie" test and earned respect as a significant gamer much more quickly than if you stumbled your way thru what others pride as "the ultimate hobby. ".




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