Posted February 20, 2015
So, before Groupees launches another bundle to tempt me, I thought I would do a quick analysis on what my haul actually is over there. I may jump on the "no more bundles" bandwagon, but first wanted to tally up what I've actually received in order to value it.
Since August 12th of last year (my first bundle, "Remute's Retro Rampage"), I've spent $37.50 on 28 bundles, or about the cost of one AAA title here on GOG.
I have received:
Five codes for GOG games, list price at $28
Eight Direct Downloads for games that are on GOG that I don't have, GOG list price at $78
I also traded Steam codes for Two more titles on GOG, list price $16.
So far, we're up to $122 in list price games.
I also got direct downloads for Ten titles I already own on GOG. Oh well.
For the random games:
Five that I have played and enjoyed to various degrees. Probably about ten hours of entertainment total.
...and exactly 125 other direct-download games! Many of them look wretched and I'll never touch, some of them I've already played and rejected as horrible, but there are quite a few on my "interesting list" that I do want to try.
So, if I conservatively value the GOG games at "max normal discount" of list - 80%, that's:
$8.80 for the games on my GOG shelf
$15.60 for the direct downloads of games available on GOG
Let's arbitrarily (and conservatively) value the random games at 50 cents/hour of actual enjoyment, and add another $5 for the games I've already played and liked.
That's $29.40, with over a hundred games to hack through to add more value... and dozens upon dozens of Steam and Desura codes I may be able to trade.
By that metric, I'm short on value, with the real possibility to catch up with enough time (and some good luck) to find some gems in that huge backlog.
Of course, if you value anything a little differently (say, list -75% for the good titles), it would be easy to come out ahead.
I dunno... I think it's pretty close. If it weren't for the couple of bundles I got totally burned on and got zero, I'd still be feeling great...
I don't know if I can stop. :)
Since August 12th of last year (my first bundle, "Remute's Retro Rampage"), I've spent $37.50 on 28 bundles, or about the cost of one AAA title here on GOG.
I have received:
Five codes for GOG games, list price at $28
Eight Direct Downloads for games that are on GOG that I don't have, GOG list price at $78
I also traded Steam codes for Two more titles on GOG, list price $16.
So far, we're up to $122 in list price games.
I also got direct downloads for Ten titles I already own on GOG. Oh well.
For the random games:
Five that I have played and enjoyed to various degrees. Probably about ten hours of entertainment total.
...and exactly 125 other direct-download games! Many of them look wretched and I'll never touch, some of them I've already played and rejected as horrible, but there are quite a few on my "interesting list" that I do want to try.
So, if I conservatively value the GOG games at "max normal discount" of list - 80%, that's:
$8.80 for the games on my GOG shelf
$15.60 for the direct downloads of games available on GOG
Let's arbitrarily (and conservatively) value the random games at 50 cents/hour of actual enjoyment, and add another $5 for the games I've already played and liked.
That's $29.40, with over a hundred games to hack through to add more value... and dozens upon dozens of Steam and Desura codes I may be able to trade.
By that metric, I'm short on value, with the real possibility to catch up with enough time (and some good luck) to find some gems in that huge backlog.
Of course, if you value anything a little differently (say, list -75% for the good titles), it would be easy to come out ahead.
I dunno... I think it's pretty close. If it weren't for the couple of bundles I got totally burned on and got zero, I'd still be feeling great...
I don't know if I can stop. :)