koda wrote:It's not that I want to find a game I can 1CC... I wouldn't really feel any sense of accomplishment by hunting down the easiest shmup out there and beating it. I really like the element of high difficulty... it's just that I want to feel like I'm improving and making progress.
You always have the solution to aim a good improvment at some particular games you like.
I mean, I like and play shmups sinces ages and, some time ago, my average surviving time for a first run on an unknown game was like stage 2 boss. Even after years, it has NOT improved to stage 4: it's still more or less the same. So, to a certain extent, I've not gained so much general skill in the genre.
However, I'm able to develop decent skills if I really concentrate on a game I like, and often I can 1cc it and reach pretty good scores in the end. Probably it takes me more time than some others, as I usually have to play every shmup like a memorizer in order to 1cc it. Apart from one or two very surprising exceptions like EspRaDe, it's usually a matter of months before I become really comfortable with a game.
You see, it's really easy to feel like you'll never reach great skills in the genre itself, and never will be able to learn a game fast. I personnally gived it up years ago. But you still can reach competent play on some particular games you're working enough. I probably would call me a bad shmuper but, every 6 months or so, I also can say that I'm good at this or that particular game.
So, if for the moment you feel a bit short on "pure skill" like I always feel myself, you could try to grab one or two games you like (that is, games that won't bore you), and then play them extensively for weeks or months. Dedication on one game makes improvment easier, gives you more fun (because you can try new things in the parts you master), more satisfaction (because even if the process is slow, you can see yourself scoring higher and see the 1cc approaching), and so stops you from feeling discouraged.
