Paul’s Current Top 3 PC Games

Enough Thinking: Balancing Triggers and Tactics

In my last post, I talked a lot about the heavy mental lifting involved in games like Civilization. I love that stuff—it keeps the mind sharp. But I can’t run on critical thinking alone.

Sometimes the “software engineer” brain needs a break, and the “20-year Army vet” brain just wants to rely on muscle memory. To keep that balance, my current gaming rotation is split between pure reflex and calculated strategy.

Here is the breakdown of what I’m playing right now, how I play it, and how much time I’m sinking into it.

The Daily Driver: Battlefield 6

This is my bread and butter. Battlefield is the one game I can launch regardless of who is online. It serves as my primary stress relief after a day of coding.

  • Play Pattern:Hybrid (Solo & Squad)
    • Solo: If I’m by myself, I treat it as a sandbox. I jump into a match just to grind weapon attachments, test vehicle loadouts, or mess around with the mechanics. It’s chaotic, loud, and low-pressure.
    • Squad: When the guys are online, the dynamic shifts. We lock in, call targets, and play the objective. But the beauty of BF6 is that I don’t need the squad to enjoy it.
  • Time Invested:Consistent (5–10 Hours / Week)
    • This is the “steady drip” game. I’m consistently clocking in about 5 to 10 hours a week. It’s not a marathon session game; it’s the reliable hour or two I grab whenever I have a gap in the schedule.

The Squad Requirement: ARC Raiders

ARC Raiders is a different beast entirely. It’s high-stakes extraction, and it demands total attention.

  • Play Pattern:Strictly Co-op (Duo/Trio Only)
    • I have a strict rule for this one: I do not play this solo. The extraction mechanics and PvPvE threat mean communication is non-negotiable. Unless I have a duo or a full trio of friends in Discord ready to watch my back, I won’t even click the icon. If Battlefield is for chaos, ARC Raiders is for coordinated survival.
  • Time Invested:Appointment Only (Beta/Event Intervals)
    • Because of the strict squad requirement, my hours here are lower but much more intense. I treat this like “appointment gaming”—I’m not idling in the menu; when we play, we are 100% focused for that specific session.

The Strategic Anchor: WARNO

When I’m done with the shooters but not quite ready to log off, I switch to Warno. It is currently my top non-shooter, serving as the bridge between adrenaline and strategy.

  • Play Pattern:Solo Campaign (Army General)
    • I almost exclusively play the Army General campaigns. The persistent Risk-style map forces me to care about logistics and “Defense in Depth.” My friends have pointed out that I naturally apply tactics like feints and probing attacks—instincts honed over two decades of service. It’s the one game where those skills transfer directly to the screen.
  • Time Invested:Heavy (Nightly Sessions)
    • Since building the new rig (COVEFEFEMKIII), this has become my nightly ritual. The Ryzen 7 9800X3D handles the unit simulation effortlessly, and the Alienware Ultrawide lets me manage the entire frontline at once. I’m easily sinking the majority of my free time here, often losing track of hours as I plan the next operational turn.

The Verdict

For me, this rotation is perfect. Battlefield provides the consistent release, ARC Raiders offers the social thrill, and Warno engages the tactical mind without burning me out. It’s enough thinking to be rewarding, but enough action to be fun.