10 Video Game Items That Are Completely Useless (On Purpose!)



One man’s trash is… actually maybe just trash.

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21 thoughts on “10 Video Game Items That Are Completely Useless (On Purpose!)”

  1. Those film reels weren’t useless, they helped introduce me to film noir and some of my all time favourite films.

    The naked city
    The set up
    Double indemnity
    Sunset Boulevard
    Night and the city
    Touch of evil

    Just to name a few.

    Reply
  2. Just at the start of the video and haven’t watched through it. I’m going to say the knife and fork weapons in Skyrim. If they’re in the video I probably won’t be surprised.

    Edit: Finished the video and surprised these useless weapons weren’t included but they probably were trying to keep it one item per franchise

    Reply
  3. Dragon Age: Inquisition had a necklace you could equip called "Victim of Fashion" that gave you +1 Cunning, -100% Magic Defense, -100% Melee Defense, -100% Ranged Defense, and to top it all off had a description that just said, "An Astoundingly Bad Idea."

    Reply
  4. The acid soaker from Fallout 4's Nuka World. The fact that you spent nuka tickets on it and all it does is literally little to no damage to it. It's basically the Deliverer with a waterspout attachment

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  5. About dung being useful in videogames, even Monster Hunter games makes use of it. Using it against a monster in MH Rise after turning the item into a Dung Bomb, will make the monster much more likely to flee from you during battle, giving you and your party time to fix-up any wounds on themselves or sharpen their weapons in a relatively safe place to not get their sharpening animation being interrupted by a monster attack, before heading after said fleeing monster once the party is ready to continue. In past Monster Hunter games though, while it did the same thing as in MH Rise, it also had another use: Instantly breaking free of a monster pinning you instead of needing to shake free, as the Dung Bomb is the only item in that game you can use while pinned. In MH Rise though, that function to easily break free of being pinned, is instead given to the newly introduced to the franchise: The Wirebug

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