... I guess there's still not a game that feels like a traditional tabletop role-playing game, like a D&D that actually feels like playing with my friends. I mean, you can play online versions of those games, but you still need somebody to run it, and it's still not quite the same. ...

I mean, I remember spending summers home during school where my friends and I would take turns just grinding Final Fantasy II while the rest of us watched someone sit there and grind Final Fantasy II.
In Context
... a door opening animation you have to watch. Like it's not fast. So again, if I was playing this at a regular pace, or if I was playing this, what I would have been in high school when this would have come out or wherever, then perhaps I would have had the patience I mean, I remember spending summers home during school where my friends and I would take turns just grinding Final Fantasy II while the rest of us watched someone sit there and grind Final Fantasy II. I don't have the patience for the grinding this game needed for me to continue. But it definitely act three is where it does slow down because it wasn't just the grinding for me. It was also that sometimes I couldn't figure out exactly where to go or what to do ...