I used to be an obsessive achievement hunter. I’d play any Xbox 360 or Xbox One game I could get my hands on just to 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:score those precious cheevs. I even ha🐓d a Windows phone merely to add toဣ my growing gamerscore.

Before streaming was a thing, we’d use the likes of LoveFilm to rent games by post just long enough to complete them and 🐲then send them back. I did that easy to 1,000 point Avatar: The Last Airbender game. I played countless crappy titles just for that sweet, sweet Gamerscore.

Related
Move Over RPGs, 2024 Iꦬs The Year Of The Cozy Game🐻

I saw some mega-cozy games at PAX East this year, and they have me excited to sℱpend 20🍌24 having some pure-hearted fun.

I could spend hours telling you about some of the achievements I put my blood, sweat, and tears into. But the best way to explain my obsession is to tell you a single anecdote: I played Wordament for Windows Phone in Arabic. One of the 𝄹achievements required becoming World Champ (top of the leaderboard) and because there were far fewer Arabic players than 🎃English ones, competing in another language greatly improved the odds of winning. I don’t know Arabic. I just fluked it by recognising which characters tended to go together. I got that achievement, by the way.

As a double bonus, when the game launched for Xbox, it auto-uꦫnlocked all the achievements because I’d already completed it on mobile. I think Windows Phone achievements have been erased from existence on Xbox profiles, meaning all my hard work amounted to nothing. Yet I still have those painful memories.

All Kinds Of Cleaning, Demolishing, And Decorating Fun

Once I became a mother, I had less time forജ gaming. These days I struggle to find the time to play games I really want to play, never mind playing junk just for achievements. I’ve fully shaken my achievement-hunting ways. For example, I’ll always try and get review codes for Xbox, but I have to play differently than before. I used to check the achievement list to ensure I w𒈔ould be unlocking everything as I went, without risking any missable achievements. I avoid reading achievements before I play for review, as all too often they contain spoilers. That leaves me just trying to mop up any remaining achievements in the post-game.

However, every now and then, I dip my toe back into achievement hunting. I play something just for the sake of getting those accolades. Just for fun, not for work. And games getting ported to the console are the perfect choice. I didn’t play when it launched for PC, but now it’s come to Xbox it caught my attention. I hadn’t played 💃the original either, so it’s entirely new to me. I’m a lover of sim games, so it felt like something I could enjoy while earning some easy achievements.

The first port of call was to check the achievement list. It was all about performing daft actions to unlock the easy ones. Put a laptop in a fridge? Easy. Drag a wheelybin into a house? Done. Throw a bin bag into the bin😼 from ten meters away? Okay, that one took me a little longer. I ended up building some steps above a second-story balcony just to get the dist𓆏ance in height, and it worked a treat.

Daft Things I Did To Get Achievements

I underestimated House Flipper 2. The more I played to get achievements, the more I found I wasn’t just playing to get achievements. ♍It’s become my new obsession. It’s exactly the kind of sim game I love playing, and I weirdly love how the colour-schemed room reminds me of my childhood when my mum, who watched far too much Changing Rooms, felt that every room needed a colour theme and a feature wall. House Flippers 2 has very much the same vibe.

I’ve been playing it non-stop and it goes beyond just trying to get achievements now. Every house I fix up, I strive to make it perfect. I spend ages cleaning, finetuni🌺ng all the details, and placing decorations, and I go above and beyond what the game asks of me to ensure every little detail is how I want it. It means I’m not so efficient at making money as I&rsqu🤡o;m spending money I didn’t need to 𓆉spend, but at least my houses look damn good.

Some houses have items you must decorate the place with, and when I started pulling out pieces of a train track, I spent far too long arranging them properly, ensuring they fit together and placing the train and its carts on top. My husband came in and laughed aꦏt me. He’s a House Flipper fan and arrogantly said, “You can just place them anywhere, it doesn’t need to look nice.” I knew that. But I wanted to make it nice. That’s the perfectionist in me, and maybe that’s why I always loved achievement hunting. You don’t need to unlock them all, but I want to.

Next
Collapsus Is Candy Crush With A Liter⛎al Twist

The gyroscopic puzzler is a ton of fun and desig❀ned for everyone.