>>43273451You could keep replacing the words in my sentences with your own, sure, but that's not convincing anybody but you.
Nothing you do with code, which is what hacking is, will ever be related in anything but a tangential way to martial arts, gunplay, or acrobatics.
Nothing.
Actually messing with computer system security, no matter how it is implemented, is and will always be a completely separate skillset, with its own rules, its own nuances, and heavily demanding periods of study and training.
No matter how closely you integrate computers into daily life, they are still computers.
That you don't see this is just utterly beyond belief, and it tells me that you haven't coded so much as "Hello World" in your entire life, let alone learned SQL injection, cryptography, or electronics design.
There is nothing in punching, kicking, jumping, shooting, or anything else that a shadowrunner/whatever does that will be any help in learning how to compromise computer security.
They.
Are.
Separate.
Skills.
You can't punch a subroutine, you can't shoot a virus, and you can't jump over a botnet. Any time spent at the gym or the range is time not spent in front of a terminal and a stack of manuals. It has no overlap, and it never will.
Nothing you do in the gym will ever help you in front of a computer.
Nothing you do in front of a computer will ever help you in a gym, besides maybe looking up exercises.
I don't know how to impart this to your broken mind. It's just never going to be even remotely feasible, until we're all transhuman geniuses who can memorize encylopedias while doing olympic-level workouts, and at that point it's not cyberpunk anymore, and it's STILL just multitasking, not practicing related skills.