Wednesday, April 21, 2010

The 10,000 Hour Rule



The final speaker in this year's professionalism class alluded to Malcolm Gladwell's book Outliers, a study of the factors that contribute to high levels of success. He specifically mentioned the 10,000 hour rule, the idea that it takes 10,000 hours of practice or experience at a certain discipline to gain effortless mastery of it.

I obviously haven't practiced music for even close to 10,000 hours. In fact, I likely have well short of even 1000 hours under my belt. I am a very long way from being a musical master. But there is something else, an area of expertise wherein I am much closer: I am, slowly but surely, becoming a Pokemon Master.

I set out to tally up my total estimated hours of playing Pokemon since the release of the original Red and Blue versions for Game Boy in 1996. I've played through most of the games released since, beating at least two of the handheld games in each generation, as well as several of the console games. The estimates are very conservative; the real totals could easily be over 50% greater, but the hours still add up quite formidably. Here are the results:

Red - 200
Blue - 200
Yellow - 100
Stadium - 50
Silver - 200
Gold - 100
Crystal - 200
Stadium 2 - 25
Ruby - 200
Leafgreen - 200
Coliseum - 25
Diamond - 200+
Soulsilver - 65+
_____________
Current Total = 1765

My dad often used to bug me about my burgeoning Pokemon Mastery. He would tell me that if I devoted all the space in my brain invested in Pokemon knowledge, I could learn at least one new language. He probably wasn't exaggerating by as much as he thought. All this knowledge of stats, moves, evolution, items, strategy, and other specifics seems to stretch deeper the more I think about it.

Its too bad a true Pokemon Master has to know such things. Otherwise, he'd probably be a much better musician.

P.S. The book in the image is ridiculously novice. Don't even bother.

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