I didn't want to play a sports game based on golf. However, a friend of mine on Facebook invited me to play Golf Clash. Since I wanted to be friendly, I took him up on the offer. (I would later find out that he got an in-game bonus for every friend invite who joined the game. I positive that had nothing to do with it.). While I wouldn't say I was hooked, I did stay with the game longer than I thought I would. I would soon find out that another friend of mine also played Golf Clash. That surprised me. One of the features of the game is that you can challenge your friends to matches. One day, before I got my own computer, I wound up playing against the two of them at the same time, alternating between them for over ten minutes. I had to stop because I was running out of time at the library. I forget where I was that day, but it was getting confusing playing between the two of them. I've played with other friends, on occasion, but most of them have since left the game.
The object of the game is basically just golf. Two players put up money from the game, play a hole, and the winner gets both players' money. The winner also gets a chest with a little more money, as well as cards to develop clubs. Originally, the holes were all created for the game, involving situations that were really feasible in real life. Recently, they have been licensing real world courses for the game, which are more authentic, but not as much fun.
Sometime after I started, and just barely getting really good at the game, Golf Clash introduced the concept of clans. Up to fifty players could get together in a clan, getting extra bonuses for their combined wins for how well their clan did each week. My friend found a clan, and I joined him there. I managed to get my second friend in the same clan as well, but he got kicked out after a short while because our clan's leader at the time didn't feel he was playing enough. However, both my friend and I have stuck through ever since. In fact, he somehow got to be our clan's leader after the original one felt that the clan had too many players not caring enough about competing.
I have since become one of the better players there, KentuckyBBN, even though I still don't consider myself that great. Luck is still playing a big role in my playing. Sometime in the next month or two, I will have maxed out one of the power clubs of the game, after already maxed out all of the basic and medium clubs. Golf Clash has since instituted seasons, offering better benefits and challenges lastly every four weeks. (Players can pay to get them faster, as well as many, many, many other offers. I've read on social media about the complaints over pay-to-play.) One new feature that has just started is a three-way challenge among clans, competing over a weekend a course with many club drawbacks that can only be resolved by having the best scores on four secondary courses, whose ownerships can cycle every four hours. My clan won the first time it was out, but only came in second the next two times. I must admit, I had some burnout playing the same holes time and again, but I do what I must for my clan.
That includes taking over as leader. My friend, the current leader, hasn't been able to play much lately. If he needs me to step in, I could. I would just need a week to prepare and proper timing, and I would be in a position to take over at the next season change. I admit, my style would be different from his, but I might be up for the challenge. Maybe. I still find it strange that someone who hates sports games as much as I has become a sports gamer.