Learning While Leveling: Terraria

Terraria! From https://terraria.org/

If Malcolm Gladwell could see my Steam account, he’d agree that out of the handful of games I’ve sunk some time into, Terraria is by far the game I’m closest to mastering. (just for the record, I’m nowhere close to my 10,000 hours, but I am over 1K including all that AFK item farming…) Terraria is a 2D open world mining fantasy game. It’s not super difficult to survive, but it literally starts you out on a sunny day in the woods with a couple of tools and a twinkle in your eye.

Day 1 – This Looks Pleasant
Night 1 – Is That a Zombie?

Before too long you’ve wandered into more hostile biomes and realized that zombies roam the world after dark. Once you’ve sorted out how to survive the first night (or died and respawned many times… it happens to the best of us) you’re off on an escalating series of stat, equipment and world improvements to become powerful enough to unlock the secrets of your world. I’m lucky to have played all of my Terraria hours with my wife during early stages of our relationship, so I can’t say enough good things about the quality cooperative play in the game. But I’m not here to sell you on Terraria, but to share some life lessons that I’ve picked up while mining my way towards Journey’s End.

Mastering Your World

After your first few moments of bewilderment in the game, Terraria naturally guides you to stake your claim over the world. There will always be natural forces at play, but just about every phenomena can be controlled with time and some good old-fashioned grunt work.

That’s going to be a pain to get around…

If you’re constantly trekking from one part of the map to another and are feeling frustrated with the myriad obstacles along the way, change them! Even a novice player can make rudimentary upgrades which massively improve your day. Once you’re feeling a little craftier, infrastructure projects like Terraria’s ubiquitous sky bridges take your experience to a whole new level. Later, you can defy physics further by building teleporters to your frequent destinations.

I think the biggest lesson here is that if you’re willing to invest the time and energy to increase your quality of life in a 2D block world, you should probably take a moment to revisit obstacles you encounter in the real world.

Life doesn’t afford us the luxury of impossibly floating roads or instantaneous teleportation, but the reminder that you can edit your world is a powerful one. Maybe you can’t strip mine the metaphorical mountain in your way, but you can probably do something about the bits you metaphorically bump into everyday.

Start small! What little environmental changes would make your life a little better? Some fixes are utilitarian: Would that second charger in the other room reduce a little frustration? How about reorganizing your pantry so you it’s a little easier to access your healthier snacks? Some fixes are more aesthetic: would decluttering the room you’ve been trapped in for most of your waking pandemic hours help you feel a little less crazy? Would a rug really tie that room together? Once you’ve exhausted the quick fixes, maybe think of some sky bridge solutions: life improvements that defy the physics of our conventional thinking.

Playing a Wiki

Open world games are great, but then you start doing research to figure out how to progress and end up playing a wiki, which in turn becomes playing a to do list… Much like life, Terraria is open enough that you’ll constantly find yourself saying “now what?” You can usually find new things to do if you wander enough, but there are very specific milestones to advance through the game and in my experience, they’re easy enough to miss.

Terraria starts in a virtual childhood, Pre-Hardmode, where you get to know your world and face your first few bosses. If you don’t know what’s coming, you might just face off against the Wall of Flesh, a milestone boss that catapults you and your world into Hardmode, a virtual adulthood where the world gets scarier, everything gets harder and there is urgency to save your world from the creeping powers of light and dark. Sorry for the spoiler, but it’s best to be prepared for Hardmode and even then it’s going to knock you on your ass a bunch of times.

Behold the wiki, your path has been revealed!

So Terraria, much like life, is much easier with a guide and in this case the best guide is the wiki. While my wife builds magnificent strongholds for our NPCs and chests full of loot, I’m often clicking around the wiki trying to figure out what we should do next and slipping it into our Terraria to do list. It’s not always a lot of fun, and it can make the game feel a little more clinical than the whimsical adventure it aims to provide, but in my case it is a necessary evil to keep moving forward.

No shit, it’s a gaming to do list…

Which brings us back to IRL progression. Sometimes to figure out what you need to do next, you’ve got to find the wiki for life and look up a guide page. Sometimes that’s a book, sometimes that’s a person. Sometimes you truly can progress by wandering even though that can be a risky strategy. There are plenty of options, but it’s important to remember that they’re there if you get stuck or bored.

From my Giphy Channel @ https://gph.is/g/E1X59Pq

I’m not going to recommend anything in particular because YMMV and I don’t think any one path Is The Way. Maybe try taking a snippet from multiple sources and Frankensteining your own path. Also, remember to use the wisdom of others to guide your path, but recall that life is more dynamic than a videogame, so someone who entered the Hardmode of adulthood generations prior was playing an earlier version, so to speak, and they had very different meta guiding them.

The Latest and Lastest Update

Terraria is great, and while it’s a contender for my most hours sunk into gaming, it’s important to remember that those hours weren’t sunk. Instead, I look at that time as successful leisure and relationship building, with the nifty side effect of reminding me to take control of my own open world adventures and to use the documentation resources at my disposal, because let’s face it: life doesn’t always narrow down the path to your next level.

An Introduction to Learning While Leveling: Discovering Lost XP

Have you ever spent waaaay too many hours doing something only to realize that it probably wasn’t worth it? Any gamer who’s ever gamed can probably share horror stories of a time when they logged hundreds of hours to attain something that most definitely wasn’t worth it, especially once you log off and re-immerse yourself in the real world. Perhaps it’s not even a piece of ephemeral loot or a maxed stats for your digital avatar, but something as empty as the conclusion of the nth round of  whatever has captured your attention. In the cold light of day we rub our bleary eyes and wonder what went wrong. Why had we immersed ourselves so dutifully in a world that let us fritter away our precious hours?

From my Giphy Channel @ https://gph.is/g/E0plmg5

This series is a discussion about those moments and my optimistic take on where we end up because of gaming, gamification and immersive grip of those digital worlds. I’ve come to realize that while I’ve definitely logged a good part of my hypothetical “10 thousand hours to mastery” doing digital chores in games, I’ve also taken so, so much from those experiences. I think that with a little reflective introspection, we can all grow a little by accessing some life lessons buried in those gaming sessions. It’s going to take serious work though, and I’m literally going to show you my version of that work through these Learning While Leveling posts.

Yeah I know I need to clean the logo up a bit, I’ll get around to it! Look at that sexy Mass Effect styling though…

As a first introspective nugget, I’ve always thought of myself as a terrible gamer. Challenging games, whether they require feats of dexterity, application of problem solving or simple observation to find and exploit the system, usually yank me back to reality. In those moments I wonder “what the hell am I doing this for?” Perhaps that’s my engineering brain being aware of optimal solutions to these problems, but it immediately pulls me out of the immersive experience. I guess I’d rather let my brain play with the idea of space marines and alien organisms rather than contemplate the tactics and frenetic dance required to be a masterful Starcraft player. As a terrible gamer, I shrink when faced with these challenges, and yet I shine when given tasks that require time on task. Of course, I’ll happily deliver this item to a faraway virtual town for a pitiful reward, after all that is just more time I get to spend in this fantastical world.

So what is the benefit of being a terrible gamer? Perhaps my biggest Learning While Leveling win is the result of my first interaction with Guitar Hero. As a rock nerd and someone with a (unexceptional) musical background, I figured my fingers would be dancing across the colorful fretboard and I’d rock this game like it had never been rocked before. Wrong. I was terrible, it was frustrating, and I starting thinking about the required hours of practice to get somewhat decent at this game. It seemed like such a waste of human effort to get good at Guitar Hero when I could pick up a damn guitar and build similar but more rewarding skills. My first day playing Guitar Hero was the day I become a guitar player. It turns out that practicing guitar can be just as fruitless and daunting as getting good at a game, but I’m pretty happy I ended up with this extra dimension in my life. Not a bad life improvement from being a terrible gamer.

Oh yeah, I also played hundreds of hours of Guitar Hero with friends and got pretty good. It turns out that games and life are not mutually exclusive. Has anyone else had any IRL insights from video games? Are there any other “terrible gamers” out there? I’d love to hear from you as I re-examine my life, game by game.