I realized the potential of gaming when a couple of games helped me progress my pilot certification (Flight Simulator of course, and X-Plane on iPad).
Haven't don't much video gaming, but do have an addictive personality.
So, it is resolved... I now want to take on positive addictions. I want to get addicted to one or more video games that will make me smarter. They could be about strategy, or reflexes, etc. All are good. Smartness comes in many dimensions. (Bonus if they can make me a better listener, or teach me to talk less, or turn me into a morning person, or teach me intuitions related to probability/fat-tails*).
FLOSS/FOSS preferred.
Currently, I have Windows and ChromeOS laptops, and an Android phone.
Your recommendations are invited below.
Thank you in advance.
------------------------
* sadly, the game isn't available any more. But Ole Peters of London Math Lab once tweeted a link to a game that helped me understand Kelly Criterion and its relationship to Ergodicity in a way I would never have understood otherwise.
It won’t necessary make you “smarter”, but it will teach and given you an intuition for orbital mechanics.
I think it’s free this or next week on Epic, and the sequel will be released in about a month or so.
It’s highly moddable, meaning plenty of replayability. As it’s a unity game, it’s written in C#, so if you want to get into modding yourself, it’s very easy too.
https://www.paradoxinteractive.com/games/victoria-3
Since you sound very new to gaming, definitely run through Portal 1 and 2.
I don't know that it makes you smarter but it's full of puzzles and brain teasers.
Updating to say that these are logic games. Opus is more visual but just as logistically challenging as Shenzhen. Shenzhen will teach logic from a more programming perspective. As a software developer used to modern development it’s been refreshing to think things thru without modern tools.
It's essentially the first part of nand2Tetris as a game, but you are constrained by having a very limited amount of screen space (N lines of M characters, don't remember exactly how many, but essentially one screen's worth on the 80's era hardware the game is emulating for your dev environment) to work with for each component (e.g. if you were building an 8kb memory module and tried to copy/paste the code that makes up a 2kb module 4x times you'd run out of lines or characters, but instantiating 4x2kb modules would only take a few lines).
If ELO rating grinding counts, then chess or competitive programming. Or any game with a competitive scene.
Gris for empathy/symbolic understanding of emotions. It has good puzzles, and the art and storyline has no talking. I feel like it gave me a lot of good ideas about using drawing and music to represent emotion, so maybe it is useful for teaching people to talk less.
Get Factorio, and you will soon solve interesting problems and design systems, and sink hours into it.
This game is the ultimate boxed environment for learning to _automate_ and build sustainable systems. The experience is great.
Oh, and this game is Turing complete, and people have made Conway's Game of Life, and adders, and computers in the game.
And the game is very fun to play as well.
And it can be played in Linux, too.
Shopify reimburses their engineers if they buy this game.
Cambridge University releases a brain-training app that improves concentration akin to Ritalin - https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-22/cambridge-uni-develop...