Posted December 18, 2019
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In the past several years, I tried to keep my resolutions reasonable and managed to follow through: learned to speedsolve a rubik cube, improved my brainfuck globe quine...
I went through my backlog and knocked out many contenders. And now I try a game in my backpack and after 5 hours or so, if it's not panning out very well, it's uninstalled and I move on. And by 5 hours, I mean it might be 3 minutes. But if it's decent for 5 hours but didn't have any wow moments or no real strong reason to continue, I move on.
If it's a game I think I'll play again, I tag it as such.
My list went from 300+ down to 80 this year. And the majority of the games I wanted to try weren't very good (for me). I can't think of one I played over the past year that was on my list that I finished. I'll have to look.
So I couple that with: if I buy it, I plan to play it "next." That had dropped my spending and slowed the expansion of my backlog.
Now my backlog is manageable and I get to do what I love to do with videogames: explore someone's art, have some fun, I discover moments you can't find anywhere else.