this post was submitted on 29 Nov 2023
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Not sure where to post this, maybe it's more a psychology/physiology question but it's an observation I find interesting.

I like souls-like games, but usually just dodge because I'm no good at timing the perfect parry.

Ive observed before a few times that being extremely tired seems to make me better at it in general. I was stuck on the final boss of Sekiro one day, had to help someone with an emergency overnight and got no sleep, came back the next day and found it actually fairly easy.

In general if I'm sick or haven't slept well I am better at parrying in soulslikes.

I just picked up Lies of P and found perfect parrying to be harder than most games in the genre. Worked a 12 overnight shift last night, wasn't able to get to sleep after since I usually work morning shifts so I've been up going on 36 hours now. Currently able to hit every perfect Perry with little effort.

Anyone else have this happen? I am so curious about this correlation, and I suspect it's something more than just the extra coffee.

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[–] Hsanrb@alien.top 1 points 9 months ago

Could be that when you are wide awake, you are hitting early, so as you get tired, reaction time slows down so being early turns into hitting on time and a theoretical window being larger. Rhythm gamers usually make small adjustments the longer into a session they are because exhaustion just staggers response time, not necessarily ability.