FortniteThe current season is about to end, ending on February 20. That means players have a few more weeks to complete the challenges of the game for which they receive cosmetic and other rewards. I don't want a new robbery, but I can't stop the challenges.
Fortnite challenges are the functions of the game you perform to find specific icons, skins, sprays, banners, and loading screens. They are packaged with obscure themes called on the go, which to me only concerns that they distribute to too many menus so they can track. Next to each mission is a percentage, which shows how close you are to completing it. Some challenges open other challenges. Some have more stages, while others are improving – they do more damage, or get more XP. While some of the challenges include chores, such as thanking the bus driver or chewing gum, others involve deliberate action and sometimes such as dancing in certain areas of the map or playing certain game modes. There are new challenges every week, as well as daily challenges, which means whenever I log in Fortnite I have been greeted with so many more ways to experience something.
I don't care about any of these things. I don't want or need any other icons, skins, shoots, banners, and screens. I've played enough Fortnite this season to unlock all the rewards in the Battle Pass of the game, so I just swim in a quest that I'm not using. I love what I have and I'm attached to what I use.
I've never had mine dog back bling, because it is a dog, so there is no reason for me to digest the challenges of the Alter Ego mission to change the style of football in a pool I don't wear.
I'm usually too busy looking at my phone or rushing to shower to really enjoy the luggage screens I've received, so I don't have to walk around to find something new.
I've never used a spray and I don't think I will ever do it, so I don't need to "put the top 15 in Duos or squads with a friend," a challenge I can't even finish without asking a friend to play. Fortnite.
But I still do these things. I try to get into those rings. I'm considering accepting 30 requests for a random friend in hopes of bringing the group together. Fortnite give me a to-do list, and I'm damned if I'm going to leave you in the wrong.
I no longer enjoy the challenges. I've been playing a lot of Team Rumble games lately, a mode I'm sure is the only one that will create challenges. In Team Rumble, two large teams race to get the 100 removed, which gives me the lack of quality I need to run on the map to dance on different covered bridges. Yesterday I played a game after Team Rumble so I could get to the required spots; after arriving I spent most of the pool games trying to catch the other two weapons I needed to complete the XP-paying challenge I didn't need. When I lost track of Team Rumble, I switched to search and destroy mode for a limited time. It's a fun way to play, but I'm really good at finding weapons in in-game mechanics between rounds — only 14 of the 50 weapons I have to go before I open up to the third phase of the challenge, which will involve using more weapons to acquire more weapons, all of which will get me more XP I don't need because I've already finished my battlefield.
Challenges are not what make me sad; they make me understand. Last night I brought down an enemy and went in for a kill before remembering that I had the challenge of hurting a despondent player by dropping something. Wearing Enemies is a new chapter for Chapter 2, but I'm not doing it much; it sounds like a family-friendly type of teabagging, and I hate when players do it to me. But I quickly picked up that enemy until I found that the rock was high enough to pull it off, all in pursuit of the skin I knew I could never wear.
Most players are looking for rewards for these challenges, but I can't stand the fact that I haven't done anything. I want to empty those boxes and see the filling of machines go up. I know this is unrealistic and I shouldn't stress it, but I can't help it. Sometimes, after being very angry when I was taken away before visiting the three signs I need to challenge, I will challenge myself and jump into a new game, just wanting to have fun. But then I will get a pop-up that completes the stage with a challenge that I have forgotten I don't know, and before I knew it I was researching mission menus, to-do lists, and consultation guides. For me, the true satisfaction of completing a challenge is not a reward; a brief release from the shocking stress of knowing that something is working—many activities-It's about to finish.
In a recent attempt to introduce some of these cosmetics I have reluctantly, reluctantly turned around, changed my skin into a woman who climbs gears. I like coming up, so I was pleased to see that I was going around this skin. I thought I got it by completing the challenge to climb the highest level in the game, but some grinding revealed that the challenge up the hill was actually a variation on the skin, which I would only get if I climbed the mountain. while wearing a climbing dress. Diversity is not a shiny affair, and I have already climbed the wrongly-placed mountain, but now that I know the difference, the lead is my next goal Fortnite a game. I won't wear leather – I want to see pop-ups tell me I got it. I can't wait FortniteThe upcoming season will set me free from the hell of my composing, but the new season will bring new strain to depression.