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
Knowing that about any given media before consuming it is an impossible ask, so that’s a bit of a deadend to start with. I make my purchasing decisions based on a combination of developer reputation (e.g. FTL was great and Into the Breach was awesome too), reviews (not from any major game sites, I’m talking about friends and similar), and experience with the genre.
Also, as I’ve said elsewhere, I’m spending less than the cost of a pint of beer. Any given game doesn’t have to deliver all that much to justify its cost.
Even if I don’t enjoy it, perhaps my wife will, or eventually my daughter.
I don’t really understand the concept of what you’re asking. I understand the words but the emotional meaning is completely lost on me. There’s a load of assumptions underpinning it, from what I can see. Is someone else supposed to be looking at my library and drawing conclusions about my character based on it? If so, I couldn’t possibly care less. Or is it a convenience thing, like finding a game would be hard? There’s text search and there’s not an insurmountable quantity regardless.
Or something else? I don’t get what you’re asking, sorry.
I don’t know how broad the average taste is, I’m afraid I have no point of comparison. I’ve played most genres over the last 30+ years and there’s only a few I find tedious (sports games, medieval fantasy-themed stuff, simulation-focussed stuff). What is a normal breadth of taste?
Whilst I have some stuff that I wouldn’t enjoy, most of what I have was bought because it had some appeal to me. I don’t buy many games, I’ve just been buying them for decades so it adds up.
I prefer having a large selection so there’s always potentially new fun things hiding in my collection. Knowing everything about it removes some of the mystique, essentially.
It’s also worth noting that I don’t know what I’ll enjoy anymore. When I was a child I really enjoyed management games, for example, so on the one hand they have nostalgic appeal, but on the other I have enough to manage in my life now so find them exhausting. There’s also an element of enjoying things that others don’t - I spent a lot of time playing Godus and listening to audiobooks. People do not like that game!
You can perhaps start to see why I don’t like the concept of a “backlog” - my perspective isn’t built that way!