Instalar Steam
iniciar sesión
|
idioma
简体中文 (chino simplificado)
繁體中文 (chino tradicional)
日本語 (japonés)
한국어 (coreano)
ไทย (tailandés)
Български (búlgaro)
Čeština (checo)
Dansk (danés)
Deutsch (alemán)
English (inglés)
Español de Hispanoamérica
Ελληνικά (griego)
Français (francés)
Italiano
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesio)
Magyar (húngaro)
Nederlands (holandés)
Norsk (noruego)
Polski (polaco)
Português (Portugués de Portugal)
Português-Brasil (portugués de Brasil)
Română (rumano)
Русский (ruso)
Suomi (finés)
Svenska (sueco)
Türkçe (turco)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamita)
Українська (ucraniano)
Comunicar un error de traducción
This attracts intellectually detached and learning-resistant individuals who, due to their lack of reflective skills, want to reclaim their imagined position of dominance in society by vulgar attacks on their fellow human beings. The pent-up dissatisfaction with themselves is finally dumped on the product, as these people hate themselves for being dependent on a game they don't actually like.
In short, it's the Dunning Kruger effect, without the learning curve.
Self-inflicted incompetence is projected onto the immediate environment so as not to have to question one's own mistakes.