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The joy of not eking-out games

Things have sort of come full circle for me. When I was younger, I recall playing a copy of Super Mario Bros 3 on Game Boy Advance and never being able to complete it (in fairness I eventually got to the final world). This was the case for a lot of games for me; essentially they’d have infinite replayability.

As I got a bit older I was exposed to more games with linear single player campaigns. Halo 3 and Call of Duty 4 spring to mind. At the time, I couldn’t afford to buy that many games so I’d find myself doing a mission here and there, and focusing most of my attention on the multiplayer. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to play the campaigns, but rather than I felt like I needed to savour them. Sure, I could just blast through it in the space of a weekend - but then it would feel like I’ve blown all that money on something short-lived.

This mindset stuck with me as single player games became longer and longer. GTA IV, Red Dead and Skyrim for example took me months to get through, as I’d just play the occasional mission as a treat.

But nowadays I don’t have as much spare time as I once did. And it feels like the number of games in my backlog is growing each day.

I actually replayed GTA IV and its DLCs last year, and really enjoyed the experience. But only recently did I work out why it was more enjoyable than my first playthrough all those years ago – and I think it’s because I didn’t eke out the missions. The story felt a lot more coherent because it was fresh in my mind. The characters that appeared at the start of the game no longer elicit that ‘wait who were they?’ response when they turn up in the second act. And I was able to better understand the ways in which the three stories cleverly intertwined.

Recently I got the gamepass-style subscription on Playstation (‘PS Plus Extra’) which includes a bunch of older games I’ve been meaning to get through. And the fact that there’s an artificial time limit to playing them (i.e. I don’t want to pay for this tier of subscription any longer than I need to) has helped me to avoid wasting time.

Just to be clear, I’m not advocating for speedrunning single player games and missing all the side content. On the contrary, I’ve just platinumed Ratchet and Clank: RA, but did so in half the time than it would have taken me before. Previously I might have thought ‘I’ll just do the one mission’, and this was often an excuse to get distracted by crap on my phone for the subsequent 30 minutes. I feel like I now have a reason to focus for games for a little longer instead of wasting time. And as a result, I’ve enjoyed my time with them so much more recently.

So perhaps if you’re struggling with your backlog, try to set yourself a realistic time limit for each game. And don’t treat games like a treat – if you have the time, play them now!

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  • That's the great thing about being a patient gamer: games are usually cheaper, so I don't feel obligated to get every ounce of value from it.

    I use guides a lot if the game stops being fun. If it's still not fun with the guide, I drop it. Most of the games I play cost $5-10, with a handful being $20-30 and a very small number being more than that (just bought Cities: Skylines 2 for <$40, which is the most I've spent in years on a game). So if a game ends up sucking or not being long enough, I don't feel like I've been cheated, I mentally appreciate the time I spent with it and move on.

    What helped me was creating labels for my game library:

    • done - maybe completed, maybe not, but I have no interest in revisiting
    • replay - was fun and I could probably enjoy it again, but I'm done with it for now
    • play next - games I'm excited to play soon
    • maybe later - kind of interesting, but not right now
    • probably never - I didn't give it a solid shake, but I also don't think it's worth spending time on; maybe I'll sift through if I'm bored

    If I have a long break, I'll install a handful from "maybe later" and see if I find a gem. If I'm strapped from time, I'll pull from "play next," which is where I'm much more likely to find something fun. If I'm feeling nostalgic, "replay" is right over there.

    if you're struggling with your backlog

    IMO, stop calling it a backlog. Organize stuff by how interested you are, and play stuff when you feel excited to play. I have hundreds of games collected over years of buying way too many bundles, and there's absolutely no way I'm playing through them all. So I organize them by interest and play when I have a spare minute.

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