| I'm an avid video game player. If you played WoW at all, I'd gladly link you my armory - I have the insane title and shit. I've been massively addicted to games since I was like 2-3 when my grandfather introduced me to mario.
That said, I do feel your pain on some level.
On the other hand, I think of myself as awesome. Your problems sound like they come from self-limiting beliefs, whereas I don't have any self-limiting beliefs, so how can I accept that you're awesome like me?
I'm not trying to put you down, I'm jokatively saying... how can you honestly go up to anybody and say "I'm awesome!" followed by "Too scared to approach girls!"?
That is, it seems your interest in 'game' picks up when you meet a girl. You want to know all the right things to say and exactly how to act, so 'game' is useful. At the same time, you still have one-itis - you're putting her up on the pedestal and it sounds like you're looking for an LTR and not a lay.
Whether things work out or not, 'game' is no longer useful. You don't need 'game' to keep an LTR going, and you don't need 'game' to be single (if you aren't proactively looking for a lay), so your interest in 'game' disappears. Without that interest, you return to previous status quo and go back to doing what you were doing previously - gaming/whatever other hobbies/interests you might have had.
The answer is simple but there's no get-rich-quick scheme to it. You need to realize what you want and commit to that. You want to game? Then you're at the right place, but nobody here can game for you. You can know all the wittiest lines in the world; you can INVENT all the wittiest lines in the world - but if you refuse to approach strangers, where's your game? It's like you're a hermit GM of chess, but refuse to ever play anybody - nobody will know how 'awesome' you are, my man.
Once you realize what you want - is it 'game', an LTR, or just doing whatever whenever? If you want to 'game' you need to pick that up. It doesn't need to be all day every day but you need to be able to approach strangers - hit up the newbie mission. I've seen people bitching that the newbie mission was too hard, and I've seen other people arguing that it couldn't get easier.
If the newbie mission is too hard, start even slower. The way I started was saying hi to people that OTHER PEOPLE in my position say hi to - security guards at my campus, the clerk in my local convenient store, etc - I just walked by and (IF THEY'RE LOOKING) said "Hey!" If they weren't looking, I didn't pursue.
Once I got more used to saying hi to clerks/security guards, I started saying hi to people I saw who definitely wouldn't be a dick to me (Faculty in a school/university, for example, will probably just assume you're a student they forgot they had). This can also work with, say, general staff at a mall (Like janitors and shit). People PAID to do their job, basically, but I mean in particular those who don't see a lot of socializing who will be a bit harder to approach.
Then try the newbie mission. Baby steps are baby steps, but if you refuse to even do that, what's next?
Well, if you utterly refuse to attempt to overcome your AA, you're not going to be able to 'game'. In my opinion, you don't need 'game' to forge real friendships/relationships (I think some people might disagree, but my grandparents have been married 50+ years without 'game' so I'll stick to my guns on this one). If you don't want to 'game' and just want to learn how to 'manipulate' (much more useful general skill, can be applied to LTR's and friendships - 'game' is technically short-term manipulation) then you might want to try somewhere that helps deal in manipulation of friendships.
If LTR's aren't your deal, than what is? You're having these waves of "I'M THE MAN" followed by "I'M SHIT" because you're just taking the flows of life, brother. One day you HAPPEN to meet a cute girl or whatever, and YOU'RE THE MAN, and maybe you guys date and break up or it never works out or whatever, and you're back to OH I CAN'T APPROACH STRANGERS SHIT.
You gotta break that cycle and frame for your own life, man.
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