Kingjackl said:
For me it was Dark Souls. Because all everyone talks about is how difficult that series is, I assumed it's popularity was in being some kind of throwback to old school coin-stealers that I had no interest in because I didn't spend my childhood staving off parental neglect in some arcade. What encouraged me to give it a go was the Best Friends' LP of Dark Souls 2, which made me realise it was actually just a really good, really deep action-RPG series that's actually quite manageable once you know how it works. So then I bought DS1, then a few months later Bloodborne came out and I've never looked back since.
Omg, your experience was almost exactly like mine. I had a Dark Souls odyssey last year that started from watching the Best Friends play Dark Souls 2. I've scoffed at Demon's Souls, Dark Souls, etc in the past (think Yahtzee's first Demon's Souls review). I'm not fond of "hard" games (games that sell themselves on difficulty). I hated the severe "git gud" mentality from the fans, fantasy medieval settings were getting old to me, and any game that would go out of it's way to fuck you over as something I would rather not take part in. Then I saw Bloodborne, which I was attracted to by it's setting and design. And then I remembered the LP, and while I mostly drifted in and out, it did intrigue me enough to consider playing Dark Souls 1 (also the promise that there was a giant wolf with a greatsword in his mouth, and I needed a piece of that action). I had no PS4 at the time, so I thought it would be fair to give Dark Souls a stab since it was only $5 on Steam sale. Best 5 bucks I ever spent.
I won't lie, it was a rough start. Got through the tutorial without dying, but the Undead Burg gave me so much trouble (bashed my head against New Londo for a bit too, lol). Undead Parish too gave me some grief. Capra left me hitting my leg with a controller really hard (and it hurt!). Then I started. I don't know how long it took (...it was a long time, I assure you), or where exactly it happened, but I felt like I broke a "wall". Things were second nature to me and I would be better prepared for upcoming enemies. I would be less intimidated by bosses that would make me wet myself too. Then when things got a little lighter, I dug into the nice, chunky lore and greatly enjoyed that. I learned of the amazing characters (more than Solaire, who is still awesome but not alone in that state) and felt sad when they would come to troubles. I've even swatted a few (mostly shitty) invaders. There was a tragic beauty and madness in the game I just couldn't see (even in the DS2 LP) until I played the game for myself.
And then I hurriedly played the other games in the series and enjoyed myself greatly. Actually, I get a giggle when the games actively try to trip me up with a boulder or a giant anvil falling on my head. I've currently gotten all the trophies and achievements for all the games (DeS and Bloodborne included) except Dark Souls 3. Here I was thinking that Bloodborne would be the game I fell in love with (and I did, A LOT), but I somehow feel like it was actually Dark Souls 1 that was the more complete experience. If you told 2014 me that would happen, I would call you a dirty liar. I feel like I bought a completely different game/series that I was initially advertised.
EDIT: Looks like many of these posts are also of Dark Souls. Gives me warm fuzzies all around
