Build plastic models and try some tabletop wargames. Or build dioramas.
Take part-time jobs and watch your wallet grow fatter.
automotive; you can get super cheap or free crap and fix it up, last year a friend of mine found a motorcycle in an abandoned shed and we fixed it up. Got a bonded title, registration, plates, carburetor, lights, battery, airfilter, etc. All for about two hundred bucks.. I went and got my motorcycle permit and I run it around town. Might not be a good idea if you are underage or live in a restrictive country though.
Or you can get a Dremel and do all sorts of stuff! Signs, metalwork, woodwork, make bongs.... Really, I've sold loads of stuff since I've gotten mine.
[QUOTE=Kartoffel;40785267]Unless of course you live in a country with little to no firearms. If that is the case, you can also try sword collecting.[/QUOTE]
Australia restricts both. I'd put :suicide: but acquiring the gun would be too difficult.
Do something useful with your life instead of being a shut-in. Lift some weights since you're probably either scrawny or a fatass. Find a hobby that also has a big job market for it. Get out and socialize a bit, even though that may be hard for someone like yourself. If you already have real-life friends, then it'd be much easier.
Thank's for all of the suggestions, I actually talked to my mom about PC Building, and she said yes. I am still considering all of these incase we can't find a PC to do it with.
This thread can get locked.
Note: I will be contacting ScottyWired and Zakkin in the future if I do plan to. I am actually interested in Models and pivot animations but I'll see how I do with PC Building first.
[b]_EDIT_[/b]
I have taken the following into consideration.
Woodwork (I actually want to build stuff).
Models (I added Scotty on steam).
Pivot (I added Kaz on steam).
PC Building.
I think you should realise that a hobby might not be something that you choose to do out of many things and narrow down a list. A hobby might be something completely new that you had no consideration of trying out in the first place and only got to try it out by chance.
You should try those things you sort away from your list too.
yeah, do some graffiti, I know guys that are not artistic at all but are some how really awesome graffiti writers. Its just about being imaginative.
Learn how to throw knives?
It's something I'd want to learn.
If you have enough financial possibilities you could build computers with custom cases. I dont mean those generic bling bling pc cases, i mean really smart and classy cases, just like these:
[t]http://www.siemund.org/blog/2009/01/20090124_02.jpg[/t]
[t]http://www.heise.de/imgs/09/4/0/5/1/5/0/Case_Modding_Contest_09_IMG_9191.jpg-1a41ed563d30c3b1.jpeg[/t]
[t]http://www.siemund.org/blog/2009/03/20090306_02.jpg[/t]
[t]http://www.wildpark.de/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/RIMG0121-930x697.jpg[/t]
Of course these are some top custom PCs but you can start small and try to get more creative with every new project.
Usually building one of these PCs is a very big project which needs a lot of time - perfect as a hobby. You already know how to build a normal PC, you can expand your knowledge here because you have to build more things on your own.
There are also competitions and exhibitions for case modding where you can also win prices and titles and stuff like that.
And if you do your job well, there might also be some people who would be interested in buying one of those PCs.
[QUOTE=elevate;40787494]Do something useful with your life instead of being a shut-in. Lift some weights since you're probably either scrawny or a fatass. Find a hobby that also has a big job market for it. Get out and socialize a bit, even though that may be hard for someone like yourself. If you already have real-life friends, then it'd be much easier.[/QUOTE]
That isn't motivation, that's downtalking.
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