ILUVSWTAS knows all too well my passion for Peak Bagging as we have started walking together, along with several others on this site
(MJD, scrubmaster, Ollster, aljscott);
camaraderie is a big part of it for me, sharing the journey, adventure, wild remoteness & ultimately the mutual high of achieving a goal (think about all those motivational posters - those cliches are anything but cliches when you are actually climbing mountains, rather than climbing corporate ladders etc.).
Having only been in the bagging game for less than 3 years, but approaching 400 points (200 peaks, which I prefer to count), I guess you'd say i'm a little OCD about it; I like the word passionate rather than obsessive

I love pouring over maps (particularly SW Tas) & planning ever more remote missions, the wild & untracked places are what really compel me. Tho the summit is a large goal, the journey & the adventure are a huge part of my passion.
One of my favourite old Tas Tramp articles is Alex Sklenica's solo journey in 1959 from Lake Pedder to the Gordon river via the (still today) very remote Olga River valley - a very compelling read, ignoring the misery (read adventure) that he endured. Summits were not his goal here, tho he may have passed over one or two along the way.
Another example of the 'journey' would be a summit like the Provis Hills which I am looking forward to doing some day (I plan to finish the list, or try). A 10 day trip for 1 measley point would be more about the trip than the point once it had been completed, but to stand on a summit that has only seen a hand full of walkers would be very satisfying (& I don't care if I was in a large group which has been shunned by the likes of Martin Hawes, again, sharing the adventure is part of the passion & saying these sort of adventures are tainted / less pure unless done solo is a bit condescending in my books).
Essentially to me, Peak Bagging is an excuse rather than a reason to get out amongst it on a regular basis, to explore areas I'd never bother or contemplate going without this as a prompt, and as many have said here, peak bagger or not, standing on a beautiful mountain summit is a goal shared by most walkers.
With our world & lives so bubble-wrapped & regulated high adventure is becoming harder to find; remote, untracked Tasmania provides some of this & it's in our own backyard. Humans are inquisitive by nature & exploration is a natural side-effect of this.
To each their own adventure I say, as long as you are 'living' rather than stagnating...sorry, that's my sermon over
