Grimoire is more of a measure of how much time you've spent on this game & how one sided a gamer you are, to have spent so much time on one game.
I know plenty of people with ridiculously high grimoire, and they're not elite at Destiny. They're usually pretty good at trials because they're really organised, but as far as individual skill goes, they're nothing special. And when it comes to other games? forget it, they're scrubs.
I have two PSNs with grimoire split over them but even so I just cannot be bothered to go farm stupid things I need to, to achieve a higher grimoire... like who gives a f*ck about that?
I prefer to be good at all the games I play.
English
-
Why is being good at games important? Lol
-
I didn't say it was important, in the grand scheme of things it's meaningless in real life. But in this conversation it's relevant, as that is part of the comparison the OP is making.
-
If you've been playing since day 1 then having high grimoire isn't that hard :/ It doesn't even take enormous amounts of time :|
-
I'd quantify hundreds of hours as huge amounts of time, which is what most the people with high grimoire have. Besides.. I left the game for two big periods because it was boring, from Oct 14 - July 15 & Oct 15 - Jan 16... and the time was equally split between two accounts when I was playing the game. But yeah, I haven't met a single player yet that has a high grimoire on Destiny & is solid at other games/genres.. & when I say other games, No Call of Nooby doesn't count... it's basically the same sh*t.
-
Yeah you're right tho :p But I've spent even more hours on other story games :v Whenever I stop enjoying a game, I move on
-
Edited by RadicalSpirit: 2/17/2016 10:28:32 AMI've spent most time on GTA of all games, just down to the replay ability of it. I sunk a lot of time into Skyrim, as with most RPGs. But I'll always end up switching to a different game or genre within a few weeks, it's habitual at this point.