How Video Games Showed Me What Really Matters In Life

I have fond memories of video games. My first experience with them was when my uncle handed down his Atari 2600 when I must have been about 5 years old. I played those simple games on another hand-me-down, a 12” black and white TV. Do you think that mattered to me? Nope, I was having so much fun playing Q*Bert, Frogger, Asteroids, Space Invaders, Missile Command and more, that I could care less. I was so happy with what I had.
Today, video games have become amazing showcases of technology and design. Instead of a few colored and jagged pixels, the places and characters look nearly lifelike.
You know what though? Many of the developers have come to rely on the graphics to sell the game and neglect the actual gameplay. Graphics have become a flashy crutch for sales, but the deeper gameplay is the most important element!
They know that fancy graphics can wow a crowd and sell units, and for a lot of companies that is enough. Graphics are nice to have, sure, but they are just eye candy. The real staying power, what makes a game a classic, what people remember decades later, is the actual gameplay.
If you took little five year old @getonthetrain and let me play an hour of modern games I would have been absolutely floored. I was supremely happy playing those Atari games, but having played the fancy games of the future, would I enjoy my old Atari as much? Probably not, even though it was the exact same thing that had given me loads of enjoyment before the time-traveling experience.
The ancient philosopher Epicurus once said ”Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for.”
I would have seen something better, and what I had was no longer enough.

One day I realized that playing my favorite computer games gave me just as much enjoyment as those old games did back in the day. The games I play today are so much more advanced that I should be experiencing that much more happiness, right? More is better, at least that’s what they tell us.
Well, that’s not true because humans adapt to their situations. I saw I had only moved my baseline of happiness from Atari level to modern PC level. This adaptation was happening everywhere I looked.
Harvard psychologist Daniel Gilbert did a study and found that after three years both lottery winners and amputees both have the same level of happiness. One study showed that while income in developed nations has soared since WWII, the level of happiness has remained static. Another study showed that any income after $75,000 in America doesn’t really improve happiness at all.
In addition, the amount of happiness you get per dollar decreases the more you make. Imagine if you only made $10,000 a year, every one of those dollars would be precious and you would mostly be buying the things that it takes to live – shelter, food, etc – with little to none left for things that bring you happiness. Still, you are better off than if you made $0!
Compare that to making that last $10,000, going from an income of $65K to $75K. You already have your needs taken care and plenty of life’s comforts, so that extra $10,000 isn’t life changing. Most people would blow it on ‘stuff,’ a few extra toys or vacations or things that will eventually just take up space in their garage. Your life is made only marginally better off with that last $10K.
The more money you earn becomes less and less useful as a way to increase your happiness, eventually adding none.
Of course, we are constantly told we need the latest and greatest. That we need more and bigger. The greatest car. The latest phone. A bigger house. More clothes.
We don’t. It’s just a way to get you to willingly part with your money. It’s just a way to keep you moving on that hamster wheel.
Think of someone who has been brainwashed into this line of thinking. They work 60,70,80 hours a week at a job they hate to pay for that large fancy house, multiple new SUV’s and designer clothes.
Hell, they are at work so much they have no time to enjoy anything.
None of those things are happiness. None of them bring much more happiness than a far cheaper version. Sure, that fancy house is far better than some run down structure in the bad part of town. But once you have an average house in a decent part of town, it really provides you a comparatively similar level of happiness. It is a place that keeps you safe and out of the weather.
I’ve lived in a luxury flat in England, and a mansion in Hawaii. I’ve had a classic Mustang and a new Dodge Challenger. Sure they were nice, but my happiness did not increase.


The expensive version of things does just about as well as the regular version. I am just as much out of the elements in the $10 million dollar mansion as I am in my $98K house. My cheap early 2000’s Mustang gets me to where I want to go just as well as my pricey Challenger did.
I’ve lived and learned, and am just telling you what was known by the great thinkers of our past. The great stoic philosopher Epictetus, who was once a slave until he earned his freedom, said ”Wealth consists not in having great possessions, but in having few wants.”
So think about your wants, the ones that TRULY bring you happiness, and go get them. Be frugal with the rest of your money. Understand that much of what you spend your money on is not improving your happiness. Use your money efficiently, and invest the rest in whatever way you think is best for you.
You can buy your freedom from work with that money. There is a common rule that states you can live endlessly on 4% of your investments. That means if you have a million dollars invested in any of the common stock market investment strategies, you can spend $40K every year and never run out of money. This is because the investment grows enough, averaged out through good years and bad, to let you trim that much off safely. You could probably do better in real estate or a business, but those take more effort on your end.
Whatever you can invest for your future is buying you the happiest thing in life, FREEDOM.
People that buy those huge houses or fancy clothes before they buy their freedom are just caught up in the superficial graphics of life. Those graphics sure do look good, but many times it's just eye candy covering over poor gameplay.

Focus on the deeper gameplay of life, and you will find happiness. You'll see that the graphics no longer matter much. Come play a better game.
Pictures: My own or 1 2 3
Oh my god! The Atari 2600! The memories, man!
You're so right, buddy. Life seemed so much relaxed and carefree back than. No fancy frills or unnecessary eye-candy. Just good ol, playability. And drawing a direct comparison to our own personal "game of life" perfectly illustrates the differences between the two.
Love your article. Pure brilliance yet again, brohter! :)
Hey buddy, thanks for the kind words. I thought the comparisons were very relevant and unique too.
The fact that both pixel graphic games and the NES classic are selling huge amounts shows that the gameplay is why people like to play. If only they also saw this comparison in their own lives.
Great article. Something from the Steem white paper came to mind
It follows that the more money and stuff you have, the more you are invested in the life you have so I agree, there comes a point when money stops becoming a liberator and instead becomes a burden. You have more to lose by taking a risk.
Freedom 4 life 😜
Mo money mo problems - RIP B.I.G.

An amazing post. My first home computer was a second-hand Atari too. :) I think I must have been 11 or 12, when we first got it.
Upvoted and resteemed!
Oh wow thanks! I did think that this article came out rather well.
Wonderful post. I agree with much of what you said - when I watch the real estate program on HGTV, I see women who practically demand that they have hardwood floors, upscale kitchen (no old tile - they want & insist on materials they don't actually need t/b happy) - they're doing it to "keep up with the Jones". They look/appear so silly, to me.
It's as if they were going to die, if they didn't get the fancy, upgraded kitchen or bathroom [seems they don't realize that they're operating from a place of negative emotion - they "feel like" they'll be embarrassed around their friends or they won't appear cool enough.
Being happy is more about being at peace - and not worrying constantly about what other people think!
That's my take. Happy holidays .
I have to wonder if HGTV seeks out such people to feature on their shows, because what you describe is exactly how I see it too. If it isn't exactly perfect in every way to their imagined dream home, even if the paint is wrong in a room - the simplest of fixes - then they will not buy it.
If they only realized that most times the Jones' are completely broke and living paycheck to paycheck then maybe they could see that by not keeping up with them and instead using your money more wisely you will eventually surpass the old Jones'.