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You all know I haven’t been playing hardly at all the last few weeks. I’ve been far too busy getting this and a couple other websites going to play World of Warcraft. To be honest with you, once I got over the lost of routine and the guilt factor for abandoning my friends, I haven’t really missed playing that much. Could it be the addiction is receding? I don’t really think so. More that it was time for one of my periodic breaks from World of Warcraft.

Which leads me into today’s topic. Today I want to talk a little about the flip side of World of Warcraft addiction. In my mind, that would be World of Warcraft burn out. Yes, World of Warcraft burn out happens just as much as World of Warcraft addiction.

Playing with the next Expansion in mind. « Kinless Chronicles

I’ve got tons left to keep me busy without being 80, and the Expansion will only open up another grand playground for me and the wife. I don’t plan to, or need to, fast track to the end-game and burn out.

Kinless really has it spot on in the above quote. Why do we flog ourselves if its only just a game? We burn out because we’re addicted and playing too much. We vacillate, going back and forth between addiction and burn out, addiction and burn out sometimes barely noticing the brief stopover at enjoyment in between the two.

Instead, why not relax and enjoy the game for what it is… a game! One of the beauties of this particular game is that its open ended. So do what you want in game, when you want. Right now I’m doing one of the very few “mandatory” tasks which is checking the mail every thirty days so you don’t lose items in transit. That’s all you have to do: Check in once a month to make sure you aren’t losing mail. How easy is that?

If you play, you’ve recognized it in some of your friends, guild mates and other acquaintances. Frequent complaints of being bored, general surliness, inability to focus on any one task, these are all signs of burnout. Maybe you’ve seen it in the form of erratic behavior; suddenly quitting a long time guild relationship, dropping out in the middle of an instance run, not being around when they said they would be.

Perhaps one of the tricks to beating both World of Warcraft addiction and World of Warcraft burnout is one and the same. Maybe we just need to slow down. You know, actually read the quests instead of just rushing through the objectives. Following the story lines rather than running about willy nilly to level in the fastest manner possible. I know what I’m saying here is heresy for my leveling guide friends, but so be it!

I don’t know what it is for you, but whatever it is, take time away from task orientation and do what you enjoy with friends. If that means fishing while chatting with guild mates, do that. If it means crafting, do that. If it means shopping for risque outfits or beautiful robes, do that!

If you do what you want, you derail the compulsion aspect of the game. Also, you will enjoy your time more and thus avoid the World of Warcraft burn out factor.

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I logged into World of Warcraft for all of a couple hours this weekend. I was busy but I also made other choices with some of my time. Now here’s the thing: What did I do with my in game time? I spent my abbreviated playing time running between auction house and mail box in Ironforge taking care of my auction routine. What I want to talk about is whether that was a smart decision.

I sit here Monday afternoon thinking heck no that wasn’t a smart decision. When I spend the better part of a weekend playing, its no big deal to spend a couple hours on auctions. Its important that I do because I like doing the auction house thing better than I do farming to to make my gold. But if I’m only going to log on for a couple hours total, why do I need to worry about gold whatsoever. Yeah, you do have to empty the mailbox every 30 days or you lose what you had in there, but I was 3 weeks away from that happening at the very least.

I think what I should have been doing is playing. I should have been out there questing which is what I enjoy the most. Maybe with my mage Undorf who hasn’t seen the light of day in forever. I could work on getting him up to the high 60s so then I could join in battlegrounds effectively again. I love being a frost mage in battlegrounds!

Here’s the thing: When you stop being addicted and start just logging on now and then for fun, for a break from whatever else you have going on or an escape, then do whatever makes you happy in game. All the parameters have changed. Face it, at a couple hours a week I’m not going to get anywhere on the reputation ladders with various factions. Its unlikely I’ll be invited into any sort of intense group situation let alone a raid. I for sure don’t need to continue bringing a thousand in gold every week because there really isn’t anything to fund. I don’t have to spend time leveling crafts (unless that is what you enjoy) because you’ll likely not be crafting much anyway. Change up your thinking from whatever the routine was when you were in game constantly and just have fun. Isn’t that why you started playing World of Warcraft in the first place?

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