Happens to me too. The only game I play a lot now is vanilla WoW (and mostly for the social aspect during raids and to talk with English speaking players). During the last few days I find myself enjoying doing difficult projects with Arduino, because it's more nuanced that gaming: there's a need to do physical stuff, to program, to debug, so there's higher level of engagement. The videogames felt great for me in my childhood, when they were something new and unexplored. Now I pretty much understand where each game plot goes, what the limitations if the games. I don't feel like I discover something.
Also I do a hydroponics project. And I ride a motorcycle once a week. And workout regularly. All this replaced gaming, and in my childhood I played like all my free time, and didn't want anything else.
Happens to me too. The only game I play a lot now is vanilla WoW (and mostly for the social aspect during raids and to talk with English speaking players). During the last few days I find myself enjoying doing difficult projects with Arduino, because it's more nuanced that gaming: there's a need to do physical stuff, to program, to debug, so there's higher level of engagement. The videogames felt great for me in my childhood, when they were something new and unexplored. Now I pretty much understand where each game plot goes, what the limitations if the games. I don't feel like I discover something. Also I do a hydroponics project. And I ride a motorcycle once a week. And workout regularly. All this replaced gaming, and in my childhood I played like all my free time, and didn't want anything else.