When I was younger, I would spend months — and in some cases years, on and off — completing the same videogames repeatedly. Forget new game plus. I didn’t need extra motivation.

This was back when I could only afford to buy a handful of titles a year, if that, and had loads of free time in which to obsess over them — even if they ended up not being very good, in retrospect. Their quality, or lack thereof, did little to discourage me. They were all I had!

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These days, I rarely get around to revisiting games due to there simply being too much new stuff out there competing for my attention with not enough time to sift through it. It’s a wonderful problem to have, if you could even really call it a “problem.”

Ever since Nintendogave outthose Game Boy Advance titles to early 3DS adopters, I’ve had them sitting on my system, unloved. Recently, though, something compelled me to start upFire Emblem: The Sacred Stonesand now that I’m ten hours and far, far too many restarts in, I’ve figured out what that something was: I don’t remember the game, at all.

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In fact, I recall so little of my first playthrough that I had to dig up an old GBA cartridge just to double check that I had ever truly gotten into the game. According to my years-old save file, sure enough, I originally made it toThe Sacred Stones‘ final battle. Could’ve fooled me!

Having gone through this experience, I’ve come to realize I don’treplaygames so much as Irediscoverthem. And what an awesome feeling it is! (Assuming the title in question has aged well.)

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Occasionally, you’ll see those forum discussions about “games you wish you could play for the first time again.” Without consciously trying, that’s what I’ve been doing for years now — waiting until the experience feels brand new. What about you? When, if ever, do you decide to replay?

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