Final Fantasy 3 taught me english. Along with my mom.
...well my mom translated it to me until I understood it myself. :v:
Saint's Row: The Third showed me that games should be about fun>realism.
I'm glaring at you, GTAO.
Pokemon taught me that diving head first into adventures is more rewarding than being cautious of what's going to be ahead and being prepared.
But seriously though, my pokemon were way higher level on my first save in Pokemon Diamond because I had no fuckin clue what would be ahead.
Ninja Gaiden taught me that even if you're not prepared or ready for something about to happen, fast reflexes can save your ass.
Taught me that the war ain't fair and jets are cool as fuck:
[IMG]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/0e/Jane's_USAF_front_box_art.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://ilarge.listal.com/image/716117/968full-jane's-usaf%3A-united-states-air-force-screenshot.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://static.giantbomb.com/uploads/original/3/33065/1829086-usaf_f22_2.jpg[/IMG]
s.t.a.l.k.e.r taught me how to get out of here
Battlefield 1942. Still have it on my W8.
Halo 4 introduced me to the concept of buyer's remorse
[QUOTE=Hat-Wearing Man;44528673]Halo 4 introduced me to the concept of buyer's remorse[/QUOTE]
Kinda similar to how F.E.A.R. 3 showed me how to ruin a great franchise without trying.....and introducing me to buyers remorse
I mean halo 4 isn't terrible but it isn't worth 50$ or even 40$ to me
Bioshock taught me how to hack.
Simcity 3000 taught me the importance of mass transit
Doom 3 made me appreciate flashlights.
World of Warcraft taught me how to cook and sew
The Sly Cooper games taught me a good bunch of the English I know.
And the Touhou Project games taught me to stay calm when things are tough, and that not everything is as hard as it looks.
Duck Dodgers The Game was my first game.
Resident Evil taught me never to trust a "dead" body in a white shirt, and that Mansions always have huge intricate underground passages and laboratories within and/or underneath them.
For a more serious answer, Doom II was the first game that I ever played on the computer, and it really got me into PC gaming (before that, I was a Nintendo kid.)
Warframe taught me that butts look good in tight uniforms.
Dota 2 taught me to hate 2nd world countries.
[B]All[/B] videogames I played between 1995 and 2004 taught me English. And I learned it on my own, without anyone else translating
[B]Flight Simulator 2002[/B] taught me that planes are complicated and delicate machines, and got me interesed in them
Unreal Tournament taught me the wonders of PC gaming.
[QUOTE=Onepu;44526038]RollerCoaster Tycoon taught me that I feel bad for drowning people.[/QUOTE]
I still remember how bad it felt when your rollercoaster crashed and killed people. As a kid that was really fucked up. Hell, it still is.
Kingdom Hearts taught me the power and value of friendship, advice that I promptly ignored, instead focusing on more video-games.
[QUOTE=Wealth + Taste;44531733]Kingdom Hearts taught me the power and value of friendship, advice that I promptly ignored, instead focusing on more video-games.[/QUOTE]
Kingdom Hearts taught me that even the most oddest crossovers, can still make lots of money.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles for NES was the first game that taught me that sometimes sacrifice is needed(via quickly switching turtles if I was about to lose Donatello).
Resident Evil was the first game that taught me that sometimes just because something looked dead, it wasn't always the case(A zombie was only really dead if a blood pool formed after it hit the ground or if it didn't have a head).
RPG Maker for Playstation was the first game that somewhat de-mystified common inner game workings like events, variables and such.
Katawa Shoujo taught me the values of making love to cripple girls
Sheep Raider taught me to think outside the box.
Splinter Cell taught me that you can knock people out without killing them by impaling their skull with a camera.
Star Fox: Assault taught me how to curse.
Civilization taught me how to commit genocide.
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