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Since last Xmas I have started again playing on a Nintendo Switch with my 9 yrs old daughter (what a brilliant console the Switch!!!) and we have raced cartoonish motorbikes with Mario Kart, explored a world in Zelda Breath of the Wild, but there are 3 games that I have also enjoyed on my own, after my daughter goes to bed, and I will list them here below – and this is for Anna : I know and in fact I have been asking myself so many times why waste my time playing videogames, but the simple truth is that there are little gems of videogaming that won’t require you to stop having a real life and are fullfilling experiences, like watching a really good movie, or reading narrative (the first two games), or simply trying to challenge yourself (third game in this list is a tricky mountain biking game that you’d love – but only if you mountain bike yourself): Years passed by with no significant videogaming experiences…then with two friends we decided to get some second hand Nintendo DS and started fighting against each other on games like Brain Training (I am so slow with maths!). I had my Gran Turismo moments back in the Playstation 2 era then my Quake and Duke Nukem 3D tournaments against my cousin in a pre-internet era, with 2 pcs connected on a LAN etc I was 10 yrs old I think, so I’ll leave to the elders to deduce my age. I started with an Atari VCS 2600 and my first game was Pitfall. I mostly use it as a benchmark/testing thing for hardware.
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Nowadays I’ll still play Cities Skylines occasionally as I really enjoyed the simulation and RTS type games back in high school but I can’t do more than 30 minutes or an hour in a stretch. It was weird, just to have all interest in something evaporate suddenly like that. I had nearly 300 hours in Splatoon 2 at the time as well. It was weird, I was right at the end of my BoTW play through and was just like “hmm, nope, think I need to do something else now” and never finished it. Last two games I really got into was Breath of the Wild and Splatoon 2, but around 2017 or so once I was solidly in my mid-30s it was like a switch went off in my head and I just can’t stay focused on them anymore. Counter Strike carried the club though and we had one of the most popular CS servers on the east coast of the US in the early 2000s. We had a strong Linux user base back then (this was before Steam was a thing) and played a lot of Quake 3 Arena and the early Unreal Tournaments.
#SIMAIRPORT EDIT SAVE GAME UPDATE#
If you want to update the shared version simply open the Airport Sharing menu again the save you shared should be in bold.While in-game, load the save game you want to share - you can do this by loading the save the normal way, or via the 'Airport Sharing' menu and clicking "Play Now" on the shared game.Update a Save that You've Already Shared To save your own progress simply save as you would normally.Click any game you would like to play you will see the preview and title/description and below that simply click "Play Now" to begin playing it immediately!.After subscribing to one or more maps, open SimAirport or return to the SimAirport app.Browse the maps submitted by the community when you find one that you like simply click the "+" button to 'Subscribe' to the map.Navigate to the SimAirport Workshop (linked above).
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