Okay.
As interesting as this is, why should I play DotA2?
I have never played DotA1, or any other MOBA, except for LoL.
I consider myself a little above average in terms of skill for an experienced player in LoL.
Everything I'm reading is making me want to not install DotA2.
A game is something that is supposed to be fun that I can pick up with a minor learning curve and do reasonably well at.
In LoL I can pick a champion I've never played before and lane against a new champion I have never seen before and not suck.
I won't be the reason my team wins the game or anything but I can pick up a new champion cold and not lose my team the game.
From what I'm hearing in this thread you need to spend a good chunk of time on the wiki and play games with bots who don't fight back before you even think about picking a champion in DotA, and then if the other team has a champion you don't know the skills for you are dead anyway.
How is this fun for someone who does not know every detail of the game off the top of their head who as a new player does not know 3 of the champions on the enemy team?
Yes, a game does need that deep, skillful play to stay relevant and have any sort of longevity but the entry barrier to DotA is sounding so high I don't even want to try it.
So, why should I install DotA2?
D.
Choosing what video game you play is also choosing how you spend your life.
Games are used for relaxation and stressed relief, as well as entertainment, but why can't you improve yourself as a person as well while you're playing?
I believe in always trying to improve myself, regardless of where I am or what I'm doing. To this end, you'll never find me at a party, drinking alcohol, taking drugs, attending bars, having sex with random people, or any of the other wasteful things people my age tend to do with their lives for whatever reason.
You'll also never find me playing video games that don't challenge me, push me to my limits, and make me constantly improve my critical thinking and strategical skills.
I don't believe that entertainment should be about escaping your problems or escaping your own world. If your world sucks enough that you need to escape it, you should probably take a break from video games, and deal with real life first.
When I play LoL, I don't feel like I'm challenging myself. I don't feel like I'm improving in a meaningful way. The cartoony graphics and oversimplified gameplay makes me feel like I'm playing a game designed for kids. The fact that 90% of the female characters have huge breasts, skimpy clothes, and a seductive pose makes me feel like the target audience are hormonal teenage virgins who can't get any.
If you play video games to escape from life, don't mind playing a game designed for children, or don't care about constantly improving yourself as a person, then League of Legends is the game for you. I see little difference between the kind of person who plays League of Legends regularly, and the kind of person who plays World of Warcraft or Farmville. These are very grindy, mindless games. If that's your thing, then really, I have no intent on taking that away from you.
I play DotA because it's much more challenging than League of Legends. The skill cap is much higher. The possibility for epic individual plays and moments is much higher. The game is more about strategy and thinking outside the box, and less about doing the same thing better. There's the freedom of having the entire game unlocked to you, and nobody has an unfair advantage over you just because they've paid or played more. It's MUCH more exciting to watch (even most of the people in this thread have agreed about that). And, as we have seen many times in this thread, it takes all of the game-design principle norms that have (in my opinion) ruined the gaming world, and throws them out the window, flipping a huge middle finger to the shitty formulaic developers like EA and their idiotic fanbase.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-LE0ycgkBQSo you ask why you should play DotA 2? You shouldn't. If you have to ask why you should play the game with more strategy, more skill, and more freedom to the player, then you have no business playing it.
I play it because it challenges me, pushes me to my limit, and has made me a better person over these 9 years by teaching me the importance of teamwork, dealing with my anger, and taking responsibility for my own mistakes.