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I remember this happening a lot when I was a child and teenager, mainly during and shortly after LAN parties, where we'd spend one or two entire days almost exclusively inside one or two virtual environments (like Action Quake or later, Day of Defeat), I remember how my brain "quantized" many of the sounds from physical environment into their closest equivalent of in-game sounds, such as footsteps, character sounds or gun sounds, for example, laying my very tired and head, spinning from a lack of sleep and overstimulation, down to rest on a pillow, it would be disorienting at first, and then as my breath rose and sunk the covers, I'd hear the sounds of the fabric as small cracks, like the footsteps constantly in my earphones during gameplay.. I'd walk around outside and see surfaces as more or less ideal for performing strafe-jumps (something we did a lot in the glorious Action Quake days), and think about good corners to round for a one on one shootout.

But honestly, it didn't feel so different from any other after-effect of intensive out-of-the-ordinary stimuli.. Think about the evening after a day of snowboarding, as you drift asleep, your brain starts to work its way down imaginary slopes, everything becomes transformed through the lens of snowboarding, rooftops becomes candidates for drops, piles of snow becomes ramps..

or when you've intensely learnt a new concept, your brain tries around it, to see if it somehow fits into what you've learnt.. Like how people learning about neural networks, can't help but go through at least a phase, where the idea of brains being computers are very appealing.

I don't think this "Game Transfer Phenomenon" is that novel or interesting, and most importantly, not related to games in particular.

It's just what the brain does when it engages in something.. it attempts to map and transfer concepts and relations, it's how we learn and grow..



Driving home after an almost-all-nighter LAN in the Quake 2 (maybe Quake 3) days, I nearly changed lines to line up a rail shot at a car up ahead.

The realisation of what I was doing snapped me back to proper conscious reality like smelling salts. Thankfully / Luckily.


This reminds me of driving home after seeing The Matrix in the theater in 1999. I was on the parkway wondering why everything was moving so slowly, not quite bullet time but definitely slow.

I look at the speedometer and I'm doing 95-100 mph on Southern State Parkway. I then had the "snap" and slowed back to normal. Everything felt even slower, the sensation lasted for about an hour after I got home.

Inception also had a strange drive home after, not speed, but the trees didn't seem real, the sky, everything was heightened, almost dreamlike. It had rained too, so there was some more similarity to the movie, minus the car chases and rollovers.


Apparently you should take the public transport it a taxi when going to the cinema :)

But I had similar sensations after Matrix, fortunately I was walking back home.


if you spend a lot of time on photography or visual art it affects your visual perception quite a bit in a fun way

constantly, nearly subconsciously looking for framing elements, or hard edges in a scene that is mostly lit by diffuse light, etc


Like the urge to zoom out or in when you look at sth :)


Nah, a Real Photographer zooms with their feet ;)


Photography is a hobby of mine, and this is definitely another situation where I feel this influence strongly as well!


Yup, I experienced this after both computer games physical sports and even programming (I tinkered with my algorithm for drawing 2d trees in a side project for like 20 hours over a long weekend and after that I've been seeing the details I obsessed over in every tree I looked at :) ).

I think the effect was the strongest for me after that graphics programming actually - probably because I obsessed over such small detail for so long, and I played with fine-tuning the variables, so my brain constructed a model for it inside :)

It's not exactly that I "see" the healthbars or the ball trajectory, or the tree outlines on the same rights that I can see real things - it's like it's on another switchable layer.

Like when you see someone and imagine they have wings - it's not that you actually see the wings, but you can see them in your minds eye superimposed on that person in real-time. This "additional layer" is independent and can be turned on/off for me.


I had this most vividly with kayaking. I'd slowly fall asleep rocking in the river, paying background-attention to keep balance in the kayak, even though I was in my bed or in a tent on shore. I'd then also dream about floating in the kayak.


Sounds like a variation of "sea legs". Standing on land after some time on a rocking ship very often produces an odd sensation of the land moving.


I get that with a treadmill as well.




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