- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- games@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- games@lemmy.world
The decline of the Steam games platform is inevitable, and there are already warning signs.
The decline of the Steam games platform is inevitable, and there are already warning signs.
I was like that until Epic released free games that I decided to claim just in case my tastes changed or I was with a friend who enjoyed that game, but that I myself was very uninterested in playing. And then I got busier, and bought games I have high confidence I’d like but did not have the time to play just then past maybe a demo or a short while to check if I did actually like it—I’d get to it sometime later when I had more free time. My tastes tend to expand to include more things, but not to reject more things as well, so I thought the risk of tastes changing was an okay risk to take in order to capitalize on the sale of a game I am interested in now, even if I would play it much later. So far I have proven pretty good at guessing future me’s tastes.
Yeah I don’t get the ones I know I won’t like.