| Onyxmeth said: This is so much more loaded than just girls vs. games. I hope by girls you mean sex though, because if you just mean the company of women, this just became a harder decision to make. Scenario 1-Marriage vs. One videogame for life Result: The one game can get really annoying and redundant. I would long for other games to play. I would probably start to despise even looking at the game and would decide not to play it any more altogether. Then again...I just described marriage too. It's a tie. Scenario 2-Lifetime of AAA games vs. Lifetime of celebrity sex Result: My penis would disconnect from me, give me the finger and walk off in disgust if I said anything other than a lifetime of celebrity sex. I like my penis. He's a good friend, so I choose celebrity sex. Scenario 3-Touch Generation games vs. Touching women Result: In a scenario where I could only touch women and not get any satisfaction myself, my penis would probably rather have me playing Touch Generation games on my DS for it's own sake. Gaming wins this scenario. More to come as I drink more Bailey's and get smarter. |
This post was awesome haha...at the same time made me consider my choice
I mean granted anyday I probably would pick girls over games but there are times when that could come into question. I think my choice comes more from not being in a relationship at the moment but in the one that I had been with the longest (3+ yrs) I faintly recall her being 'jealous' of the amount of time I spent playing video games. To my fairness I did the majority of this while she studied or was sleeping yet that didn't stop her from tripping out. Gaming plays a very important part of my life and any girl that wants to become a part of it will just have to understand. When I think about it this way, despite of what I am thinking (of course girl > game) I see that maybe deep down inside I am actually leaning towards the video game side on this debate.
“When I was 5 years old, my mom always told me that happiness was the key to life. When I went to school, they asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up. I wrote down “happy.” They told me I didn’t understand the assignment and I told them they didn’t understand life." - author unknown







