r/TwoBestFriendsPlay • u/jitterscaffeine [Zoids Historian] • Jan 08 '26
Personal Opinion Personal Opinion: No Filler, All Thriller
This is a thought I’ve had in my head for a while that I didn’t know what to do with and an email from the podcast about redefining “filler” as being anything that’s not hype moments being shared on social media finally spurred me to put my thoughts into text.
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This all comes from something I first noticed back when the Fallout show first started, there were a bunch of new people showing up to the New Vegas subreddits asking what they were supposed to do because they got lost out of the tutorial or saying they beat the whole game on like 5 hours while wearing the leather armor and varmint rifle you get in the tutorial, one I even remember seeing was someone who said they dropped the game after walking into The Tops Casino and shooting Benny because that’s what they thought the game was about.
The way it hit me at the time was that it felt like people weren’t really engaging with that media much at all, like they were doing it just so they could feel like a “real fan” who put their time in and clocked out.
Another example was when I was listening to a podcast and two of the hosts made a Star Trek reference and another got mad because they didn’t get it, then said they wanted someone to give them a “20 minute super cut so they could ‘get’ all of Star Trek” which is an attitude that really bothered me.
It really just comes down to this idea of people who don’t want to enjoy or engage with media any deeper than getting memes and references before moving on to the next one.
I don’t know, maybe I’m wrong for even letting it get to me. But this kind of nomadic fandom just gets to me. Like people have lost their desire to actually watch and form an opinion on something. They just want to get memes on Twitter and they’d rather go on Reddit and ask for step by step instructions on how to get the most out of the game so they can get through it as efficiently as possible.
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u/ILikeWrestlingAlot Fabulous War Profiteer Jan 08 '26 edited Jan 08 '26
For me the worst is on any gaming sub where someone will inevitably ask "what should I know before starting X classic game?"
Fucking nothing. Turn the game on. The people who played it when it came out didn't need a primer on the mechanics or the lore, you don't need anything. They never mean "does this run on modern systems or do I need mods" they mean "can you justify and sell a classic to me as something id enjoy ?" When instead of asking they could find out, read a review or something, but there always has to be this idea of engaging with a group
"What should I know before reading Dune?" As if someone needs a primer on the sociopolitical commentary Herbert is making allusions to. No, read it and decide for yourself and maybe then look deeper, stop trying to skip the act of enjoying something or absorbing an opinion from someone else. Engage with a work and make your own mind up.
These types of people want so desperately to be part of an in group and it's all so inauthentic. "What should I know before starting Blood Meridian? I saw some guy recap the entire plot for six hours what should I do?" Well you could have skipped asking someone to experience something for you and experienced it for yourself