I do it based on genre. If I had played a lot of FPS's lately I want something different. I'll go play an adventure next. After that I'll get to a puzzle game or an RTS or another genre. As long as it is not the same as the game I just finished.
this. I have had a big backlog for yearsssss now (thanks to sales) so I tend to install/uninstall 2-3 games a month and keep about 15-20 games in rotation, and I play what I want to play at the time and it's served me pretty well so far.Yopaz said:I have a very simple system. I look at my backlog, pick up a game I feel like playing then I play that. Sometimes I pick games which has bad review scores just to see if it's as bad as the internet claims. If it really is a bad game then I can soon clear that off my list and move on. I have such a big backlog that I'm not hurting for games to play. I am hurting for the time to actually play them.
I guess you could say....No, it takes all the fun out of it when I have permission.Weaver said:I honestly just stare at how big it is, think of the impossibility of the task ahead and go back to browsing the internet.
Yes, you are welcome to take that out of context.
I feel your pain! I do the same things as you, plus sometimes I'll play too many games at once and thus abandon a game I just started and never come back to it. I'm still hoping that one day I'll play some of these games I bought months ago, but it's probably wishful thinking.cloroxbb said:For me, Ill buy a game (or bundle), play it (or one of them), for a couple minutes and then either get bored and not return to it, or have fun with it, stop playing, and not come back to it. It actually sucks. I have a huge backlog, and will NEVER catch up.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one in this situation. OP, your list is not "one hell of a backlog", believe meT_ConX said:My backlog is in spreadsheet form. This means I have a problem!