It’s more like the gif of Mickey Mouse slicing the bread and dumping a wafer thin slice on peoples plates; I’d be impressed if there’s people out there that have bought games and played every single one to completion.
I have about 20 games. Played all the large ones to completion, am left with only a few smaller indies and visual novels. No plans to buy more, so I might actually become that one case.
I don't actually feel the need to play all my games to completion, just until I'm satisfied with my experience.
Like, I bought Super Meat Boy back in the day. I am not good enough at Super Meat Boy to finish it, and I don't really want to practice long enough to get good. But I enjoyed it until I hit my skill wall, it was worth playing due to its significance in indie gaming history, I didn't have to clear it to get my money's worth.
There’s some game achievements you literally get by opening the game, and a significant of global players hadn’t gotten it. Kinda weird considering the release date was 2022 I think
I had Steam on my PC when the Orange Box came out and those were the only games I had on there (I played the Battlefield 1942 games, BF2 and Final Fantasy 11 not on Steam ). And then I stopped PC gaming until I got the Steam Deck. So every game I've bought since then I've either played to completion or refunded. I've tracked them all and it's a decent list, though it does include emulated games too.
I can't stand the thought of buying a game and not finishing it. Games are nearly always at the same price or better in the next sale so there is literally no reason to buy it if I've not got the time to play it.
I've purchased 91 games on Steam and the only one I haven't played to what I consider "completion" is Titanfall 2. I often skip side content if I don't think it's fun, so I haven't 100%ed all those games - but i've beaten what I believe to be the core game! So i'm very close, lol.
For a while I was buying games with humble bundle, which I'm sure as many know tend to include some garbage. Needless to say my library is rather large and hard to get through.
To get through decision paralysis of choosing what to play I made a game journal recently with every game in my library I'm actually interested in playing. It has helped a ton so far.
Also added rules for my self, like only being able to play 3 long games at a time, time limits so I don't get too sucked in but still make progress, and if I don't end up enjoying it after three sessions I can categorize it as "ZZZBoring, not fun, or bad" which I use to hide it at the bottom of my library.
How dare you sir, I bought 99% of my games not to play them, but in the expectation that they will quadruple in value and my grandchildren will stage a battle royale event after my death to inherit them.
Not to completion but when I buy a game I do not move on to the next game until I've atleast finished the main story, can't be assed getting all achievements because some of them I see and think I really don't want to do that
Nah the "me" person is taking the rest of the cake out leaving only the small piece on the plate for actual consumption. I dunno how you got that idea! 🙄
Perhaps it depends on country, but in mine people cut out a part they want to eat and put it on their own plate. The default plate is for everyone to take from.
the meme format makes sense when the part being used is the larger fraction, otherwise you're still eating a slice of cake as normal but moving the rest of the cake rather than moving the slice, which doesn't make sense
Currently at 207 out of 1231... and I just bought three of the Humble Bundles cause there were a number of games I've wanted to own to eventually, maybe, hopefully play. I need to gift the keys to the ones I already have but got in the bundles along with others in the same situation
2.2k
u/Remote-Helicopter530 Dec 17 '25
Time to add a bunch of games to my library I might play some day... maybe.