YueFei, on 27 January 2015 - 11:36 PM, said:
I think mainly that's human laziness? Maintaining top form as an athlete requires constant training and conditioning.
No, I don't think it's laziness. After all, people enjoy some things as a casual pasttime, while dedicating themselves fully to other things. I enjoy drawing, but I don't practice two hours every day. It's not because I'm lazy, I don't think. It's more because drawing is something I do to relax and get away from it all.
One might marvel at how humans, coming from primitive hunter-gatherer tribes, will develop so many unique interests. Some people are fascinated by airplanes, others by cooking, or horse-back riding or astronomy or make-up or statistics or medicine or poetry. It's almost like some people were meant to be MechWarriors, as if it were their
destiny, but the only way they can fulfill their potential is to play computer games.
Especially when you watch a game like Star Citizen, and millions of people around the world who want to go live in that virtual world of exploration, space combat and interstellar trade, I can't help but feel that those people were born in the wrong era. They feel more at home in that future world than the present. The beautiful
Star Citizen trailer starts with the words "Imagine... that you could be whoever you wanted to be." And it feels like some people were
destined to win the Murray cup. For whatever reason, evolution gave them the perfect set of abilities to win a race in space.
But then, if you look at someone participating in a beauty pageant, are they really fulfilling their potential as human beings? Was that really their destiny? Are they simply more dedicated, while people who don't dedicate their lives to the same kind of ideal are lazy? I'm not sure. When I look at people who devote their lives to looking like dolls, I can't help but feel like their aspirations are misguided and unhealthy. In this case, the romantic idea that it was their
destiny doesn't sit right with me.
At the end of the day, perhaps it's just a bunch of random mutations in our DNA that decide whether we want to win a hot-dog eating contest or be a doctor. And we're just sort of along for the ride.
The only thing I can say for certain is that the Quickdraw is a terrible mech, but I feel tempted to buy it after reading this thread.