![]() “I have a new appreciation for complicated systems that might seem daunting at first but actually pay off quite a bit if you take the time to notice how the pieces of the puzzle fit together. What I was mistakenly doing was going straight into what the game calls “Guild Quests” instead of taking the quests from the village chief, an old granny that I immediately dismissed as being the giver of “baby quests” instead of actual training quests. I had been missing a key piece of the puzzle, as it turned out. With that little extra effort I put in (along with what was probably a competitive drive, seeing as how my brother is six years younger than me), the game finally opened up to me. Thankfully, my brother and I later had a conversation about how he was breezing through Monster Hunter 3 and that encouraged me to try to understand the way the game worked before finally deleting it for the extra memory on my Vita. I tried and tried to feel like all the times I died or was screwed up by some system that I didn’t know about yet were somehow worth it in order to say that I was good at the game. ![]() In a previous post, I talked about how hard it was for me to try to enjoy Monster Hunter: Freedom Unite. ![]() ![]() Monster Hunter Freedom Unite: I Get It Now
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