Maybe I’m just someone who holds onto my childhood mindset of “pick games carefully because you can only afford them once or twice a year”. Despite having the money to be able to pick them up more often now (helps that majority of stuff I play now is smaller, shorter indie titles).
Every game I buy I play basically right away, how does stuff end up being in your perma backlog? Do you buy stuff knowing you won’t play it off the bat?
(This is a genuine question, I don’t judge people for having a big collection of games they haven’t played yet. Millions of people do the same thing with books after all!)
submitted by /u/AceDare
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r/Steam Maybe I’m just someone who holds onto my childhood mindset of “pick games carefully because you can only afford them once or twice a year”. Despite having the money to be able to pick them up more often now (helps that majority of stuff I play now is smaller, shorter indie titles). Every game I buy I play basically right away, how does stuff end up being in your perma backlog? Do you buy stuff knowing you won’t play it off the bat? (This is a genuine question, I don’t judge people for having a big collection of games they haven’t played yet. Millions of people do the same thing with books after all!) submitted by /u/AceDare [link] [comments]
Maybe I’m just someone who holds onto my childhood mindset of “pick games carefully because you can only afford them once or twice a year”. Despite having the money to be able to pick them up more often now (helps that majority of stuff I play now is smaller, shorter indie titles).
Every game I buy I play basically right away, how does stuff end up being in your perma backlog? Do you buy stuff knowing you won’t play it off the bat?
(This is a genuine question, I don’t judge people for having a big collection of games they haven’t played yet. Millions of people do the same thing with books after all!)
submitted by /u/AceDare
[link] [comments]