This is a titan of fluffiness. Also a possible skim on the government to educate citizens to take care of their well-being, and certainly a marketing tecnique to sell this in an overworking society.
Shit, me too. Imagine how great gaming tech would be by then if we don't destroy ourselves first. Or, hell. Humanity destroys itself and you get the world all to yourself. That's fairly acceptable too. If all else fails, just sleep for a few centuries again and see what happens next time.
kinda avoiding the core problem of corporations dont give a fuck about giving workers time to rest.
what good is a nice home to come back to, if your commute and workday takes 11-15 hours? that don't leave much time for living.
... Hmmm... maybe I should check my real life neighbours some time and see if any of them are meganekko... I doubt it though. Meatspace girls are usually kinda inferior.
@Glomoro : Imagine sleeping for 300 years and finding that all those sequels you were waiting for were released... but are no longer available due to being ancient antiques that don't exist outside of museums.
@SotiCoto Well, sure you might miss out on continuations of stuff from the present, but I feel like the potential for an actual holodeck or something outweighs that. Maybe you could dig up some old story summaries of all your favorite game series and easily plug that into some new tech that would generate something like an interactive visual novel out of it. If nothing else, perhaps the gaming industry 300 years from now has squashed the gacha and lootboxes for being crimes against humanity.
@Glomoro : How optimistic of you. But I believe a future where everything is a fractal of infinite nested gacha layers is more likely. Or just thousands of games that are literally nothing more than a big button for sending money. Maybe if you're lucky it'll be a 3D holographic button.
@SotiCoto Reminds me of an old College Humor video or something. Think they did a skit where this new game was ruining lives, but all you did in it was click. There was nothing, just a click counter.
@Glomoro : I think my favourite ever click-counter game was one that showed the human population of earth and it went down every time someone clicked the button. It was a simulated collective effort to extinct humanity. <3 ... Kinda ironic now I think about.