>>8925494Not that guy, but with painting and drawing and stuff like that, the pieces are t already set forth, so you can see how everything would fit together and rearrange thing, and if you mess up or go “nah, I don’t like that” it’s a pain in the ass to get it to where it was before the oopsie. Plus, some people literally can’t draw or paint, or anything like that. I’m pretty much one of those people. It’s also not a “you can do it if you try and if you practice!” Which is what literally every single artist says. They just say that because they ended up having a headstart in that field at a young age, already, somehow, being better at it than everyone else at that age. And then when people say “well, you’re just not practicing well enough!” Compare it to this, some people just aren’t math people. You could teache them hard math every single day for years, and they still wouldn’t fully get it, and if they already felt inaccurate in that field, trying to get them to understand, without actually fully helping, since said person thinks it comes easy, the person trying to learn it just gets more and more pissed off until they want nothing to do with it. And no matter how creative you might be mentally, picturing all the things you can inside your mind, sometimes it’s ohyscuslly impossible to bring it into the real world via art. And some people just don’t get that.
So drawing, painting, anything like that is automatically out of the window, and those skills are not transferable. It’s saying someone who’s good at Wii Baseball would be a pro at playing real life baseball.