>>8331652True, but when I played video games I always found myself wanting the objects in said games in a physical form - hence my interest in building Lego Halo things
I find that, even though they're fun, video games have no sense of accomplishment or tangible meaning at the end of the day; sure they pass time, you meet friends online and whatever, but in the grand scheme of it all, it's all just pixels - you can't hold what you've earned unless you go pro and win cash in tournaments
I find Lego and other figures/toys bridge the gap while allowing you to be creative; video games don't do that, unless you're talking about Minecraft, but even then they're pointless
I much prefer to have a tangible product that I put effort and time into instead of a character skin or camo that took 100s of hours to unlock (Damascus in Modern Warfare, for example - I earned that and still felt empty in a sense, it didn't feel like an achievement whatsoever)
I quit gaming after that and focused on Lego - it's a lot more fulfilling imo