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Comment by BigTTYGothGF

1 day ago

Nethack has been around since 1987, it's a little late for spoilers.

People still play this game. Spoilers still spoil experiences for others.

  • Meh, imo spoilers only spoil experiences for people who take media too seriously.

    When I consider watching a movie, one of the first things I do is read a complete plot summary, including the ending. When I do this and no longer want to watch the movie, in my mind, that’s not a sign that any experience was spoiled, but rather that it just wasn’t very interesting to begin with.

    Conversely, I have played Nethack on and off for decades, have read countless spoilers about it, yet still haven’t won and still find it interesting.

    • I generally agree.

      But there are movies that can be spoiled because of the big plot twist.

      Eg. The Sixth Sense, Fight Club, to name a few (and [anime] Your Name, even the recently released Cosmic Princess Kaguya)

      And then there are some movies where the plot is so obvious that you could have a LLM one-shot predict the whole thing.

      That said if the movie/game/whatever is released for a couple years, I think the spoiler warnings should be optional regardless.

    • I play a lot of experimental games where not knowing what the plot is is the point of the game. Doki Doki Literature Club is one such game. The experience is the point, not the plot.

      Many films are meant to be experienced, not just read or watched. Otherwise what's the point of a movie when you can just read a screen play? Or what's the point of a screen play when you can just read a synopsis?

      8 replies →

    • I disagree with your movie watching routine. A movie is more than just its plot.