Infinite Backlog gives you one place for your entire gaming collection and encourages you to play your games and get your backlogs under control. It provides a visual breakdown of your cross-platform collection, tracks gaming achievements and statistics and lets you connect with other gamers with the same games.

They are also in fediverse: @infinitebacklog@mstdn.games

  • Flamekebab@piefed.social
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    5 hours ago

    I may be from another generation (I am in my 40s), but I don’t get the point of spending money on a title I don’t know if I will have ever time or interest to play.

    The price isn’t static. If one buys during a sale then it’s available whenever one feels like playing. Much like stocking up on shirts during a sale at a clothes shop - clothing options are then available at home. Of course buying games one isn’t interested in would be strange behaviour but I don’t think anyone else is suggesting that’s normal behaviour.

    Also, this feeds stale mechanics, since most titles are bought in bulk during sales that are usually centered around game categories.

    Aren’t most sales seasonal?

    • biofaust@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      On Steam there are category sales much more often (right now TPS Fest).

      I buy at historical lows via Isthereanydeal any time of the year anyway.

      And just like weight and fashion changes for shirts, I may change my schedule and interests not to fit games I bought years ago.

      • Flamekebab@piefed.social
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        3 hours ago

        I know they exist (the sales by topics) but my emphasis was on “most”.

        And just like weight and fashion changes for shirts, I may change my schedule and interests not to fit games I bought years ago.

        Where one draws the line on min/maxing is deeply personal. I’m happy to take a risk that my tastes will remain close enough to justify the purchase, evidently you feel otherwise. Neither of us are wrong (other than you, obviously - we’re arguing on the internet so I need to be needlessly confrontational, it’s the law or some old charter or something).

        I was mostly replying because I don’t think your way is wrong but I don’t think mine is either. I have at least a thousand games in my collection. Unless something really enticing is released that calls to me (rare) then I always have fresh experiences waiting in my library. It’s probably cost a few thousand pounds over nearly twenty years and I feel that’s a reasonable trade-off to have that facility.

        It’s not the result of frivolous spending or poor impulse control. It’s a deliberate choice to min/max in a different direction. I too use IsThereAnyDeal and slowly hoover up titles that I’ve got my eye on. I rarely immediately play things I pick up!

        • biofaust@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          Of course, I am not asserting any superiority. I am just a buy one-play one, indie-loving guy.

          What mostly stops me from buying titles I don’t play directly is going through the list of all the other things I may need/want to buy with the same money.

          Regarding the most, category/publisher sales are back-to-back in between the seasonal ones, so yes, I think they are most of them.

          • Flamekebab@piefed.social
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            1 hour ago

            Fair enough - I’m only aware of the sales where things are discounted enough to trigger my IsThereAnyDeal notifications!

            I may need/want to buy with the same money.

            Most of my purchases are when the price is low enough to essentially be a rounding error in my spending. I’m rather stingey like that!