How is making a single player campaign for a game something they can’t deliver when they have been making games with single player campaigns for decades. Blizzard is a ghost of what it was.
It’s harder cause it would make less money from a product that people would actually like, instead of having a lesser game with worse MTX, preying upon people.
I have 4 main collections. I have favorites, multiplayer games that I play with friends, games that I have yet to finish but do plan on playing, and then games that I’ve finished. The unsorted stuff are games that I don’t plan on playing. Maybe I’ll get to the unsorted stuff someday, but not for the near future.
It’s simple enough for me to understand and manage.
There’s the main ‘folder/category/thing’ every game is added to by default, one for favorites that’s already built into Steam, and two more I added called “meh” and “shit”.
The main folder acts as my unsorted/unplayed category, and Favorites/Meh/Shit covers pretty much everything else.
I honestly didn't even know you could. With just over 100 games I've never felt the need to though, I can wade through them pretty easily and remember what I have.
Developed - games I made for work and need fast access to for debugging and testing.
George’s Games - which is my kid’s games that is a dynamic category of full controller support, cooperative, local co-op. More George’s Games - which again for my kid is a dynamic category of partial controller support with local co-op.
PlayThese - Games I recently bought and I am lying to myself I have time. Only has 4 games in it, most recent purchases end up in uncategorized anyways. These are just 4 immersive sims I bought in the holiday sale in 2022.
Uncategorized - 952 games.
How do I manage all of this? Well, honestly I just hit the little “ready to play games” button which only shows installed or streamable games. If it’s not installed, I don’t really care about seeing it. If I want to install something then I know exactly what it is. Although multiple times a friend will be talking about a game I should play. I’ll be waffling going “I don’t really need to buy another game.” Then I will check the Steam store page and it will say I already own it. I don’t know how, most of the time I’ve gotten a key from somewhere and it’s not something I actively bought.
So really the categorization system is “is it installed?” and if it is, it’s important.
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