I've felt like that, but think of the fun factor like an ability with a cool-down which varies from person to person or from season to season. Right after IC dropped I just had to stop ESO for a while and I think I was out for, hmm, 4-5 weeks? Not sure. Maybe 6. Logged back in for some reason I can't remember, didn't expect anything to be different, but it just felt less stale. I think it's worse when people somehow feel obligated to log in even when they've stopped having a good time, it means the fun factor for ESO is on cool-down and you have to try something else until it recharges.WalkingLegacy wrote: »I burned out doing/starting Cadwells gold a couple weeks ago.
Can't stomach logging back into play. With overwatch near the horizon it's been tough.
I log in once in a couple days to "feed" the stupid fracking horse but even that is a chore.
tinythinker wrote: »I've felt like that, but think of the fun factor like an ability with a cool-down which varies from person to person or from season to season. Right after IC dropped I just had to stop ESO for a while and I think I was out for, hmm, 4-5 weeks? Not sure. Maybe 6. Logged back in for some reason I can't remember, didn't expect anything to be different, but it just felt less stale. I think it's worse when people somehow feel obligated to log in even when they've stopped having a good time, it means the fun factor for ESO is on cool-down and you have to try something else until it recharges.WalkingLegacy wrote: »I burned out doing/starting Cadwells gold a couple weeks ago.
Can't stomach logging back into play. With overwatch near the horizon it's been tough.
I log in once in a couple days to "feed" the stupid fracking horse but even that is a chore.
Once upon a time, there was this game called: Starwars Galaxies...
Burnout? Please.
Even with those of us folk who were younger then (now 13 years ago) and who had no lives, still dumped thousands of hours into that game without any end in sight.
Why?
Because, options!
We could craft, grind, quest, farm, pvp, Quest in Space, Farm in Space, PVP in Space, and build our own homes, cities, land-vehicles, spaceships, and decorate their interiors without restraint and scant limits.
Whats more, we could do this on almost all the separate planets, as we werent restricted to doing those things on merely one world alone.
The game was built upon options, and did come with its fair share of quirks due to clever player engineering, but it was arguably never dull or boring.
Why did so many quit?
Because the developers !@#$'ed it up, par usual with most game developers.
ESO has the"potential" (I hate that word) to be a game that should never grow dull or boring.
To accomplish this however, the developers need to step up their game by an order of magnitude.
That requires funding, which apparently they dont have enough of, or are unwilling to invest.
Boredom is not the fault of the player, its the fault of the game-master(s) (developers and "Managers").
tinythinker wrote: »No matter how much you like a game, or some part of a game, there are times when you may nonetheless hit a point where you just get frustrated, bored, or otherwise in need of a break. This is natural, and changing things up or getting away for a while can refresh your perspective and recharge your batteries. In-game this might mean switching from PvE to PvP for a while (or vice versa), trading dungeons and trials for crafting or looking for trophies, changing roles on your character, changing or creating new characters, etc. Out-of-game might mean playing something else for a while, or getting into some other non-game hobby, or what have you.
When you get burned out, do you have something you can swap to in order to get a break and come back a day, week, month, etc later with a renewed enthusiasm? What do you like to do when you are ready for a change of pace?
I find that such changes keep me coming back, rather than just getting to total burnout and quitting for good, and I'm sure at least a few of your have had similar experiences.
When the grind begins to take its toll I like to relax by cruising around in my spaceship in Star Citizen. Being completely different types of games I can make room for both.
A lot of video game players treat their bodies like ***, destroy their metabolisms, and then wonder why they're so short-tempered and irritable all the time. And then they get pissed off at the game, get stressed out, and *** up their metabolisms even more.
It's funny, really, how people create their own problems...