noncompliantgame: Hi. I've never considered buying 100's of games on GOG to be a problem, but I decided to limit my purchases simply because I have a backlog of games that should keep me on the
Gamerland Express for quite some time. I put the brakes on purchases simply by placing
a low price cap on what I was willing to pay for any given game.
Hope that helps. ;-)
Setting a price cap makes sense but it's part of the problem in my case because whenever a game's price sinks below the chosen max price, I feel that near unquenchable drive to pull the trigger on the purchase. Even if it's a low priority game that I likely won't play until many months after the purchase.
ddickinson: I was under the impression that the frozen wastes of Hell were slightly colder than Switzerland. And in the 9th Circle you won't have your brother to help you out of (comical) trouble. ;-)
I'm under the impression that you've been to neither place. At least I know 50% of the equation. And having your tongue stuck to a frost-covered metal barrier in the middle of winter after nightfall in the isn't quite as comical as you might think, becosh it quickry getsh reary shcary and a shensh of Doom deshendsh on you.
ddickinson: I'm afraid your excuse about Steam would not save you from eternal damnation. Once you use Steam, you can never un-use
Steam. You are marked as "unclean" for all eternity. In fact, perhaps they will make a new level just for those who betray the DRM-Free cause.
Yeah well, sorry if I don't belong to the pure master race of DRM-free users who instead of stinky farts emit colorful rainbows smelling of roses and butterfly essence, Kim style.
Remember to loosen up when you fall off the high horse so as to soften the fall. Trust me it helps, I have fallen off a horse going at considerable speed and relaxing, letting go of the notion that I can stay on and accepting the fall prevented injury and hurt.
Also, there was lots of sand on the ground so I before taking too much credit I must point out that I mostly just got lucky.
And it was my own stupidity that caused the problem in the first place because I mixed up the controls for "gas and brakes", being a mountain person with no real horse riding skills. It can still serve as a cautionary tale though.
ddickinson: The WWF part sounds interesting, especially you having your awesome drawings on the labels. Perhaps this charity work will be enough to redeem yourself for using Steam.
If that wasn't enough and they still want to send me down to Hell, I'll point out that I always carry out my landlady's trash.
ddickinson: Regarding this bit: "Show some understanding to us old folks, hmph! (old geezer card valid because me older than you, mwahaha)". I will give you that, you are slightly older, and we are supposed to respect our elders. However, at least this younger lady did not stick her tongue to something cold and need help to remove her tongue.
So much for the wisdom of the elders. :-) So much for the respect of the youngins...
Your squeaky clean image is starting to look highly suspicious. Not the tiniest bad deed has been unleashed upon this Earth by your person, not to our knowledge. Either you're truly a paragon of all that is righteous in this world, a pristine example of the forces of Good, a divine mahatma whose light shines brightest of all and is a beacon of hope in these dreary times of Darkness, or you're hiding secrets from us.
Dark secrets!
morciu: I sinned a couple of days ago.... with the new resident evil hd thing.... I preordered.....
For the grave sin of preordering, you shall do penance by completing three games, reading aloud two manuals and writing one review. You shall also not eat the flesh of rabbits for two fortnights, drink no red wine for the same period of time and shall also not lay eyes on lewd material on the internet for the entire duration of your penance.
mintee: I was getting worried over how many games I was buying, knowing that I will probably never play all of them. But then a strange thing began to happen, I stopped playing games. Yah, I know... what da eff? Now I play them sporadically, usually a binge on one game to finish it, then a week or two will go by and I do other things. My buying has dropped off to almost nothing as well.
Interesting approach. During my 10 year absence from gaming, I usually just binged on one or two games a year over the Christmas holidays and that was it. Didn't buy a single game between 2002-2013.
mintee: Just knowing I have them collected and saved elsewhere makes me happy. also thanks to GoG who made sure they were playable, so I can go back and enjoy them whenever I want in the future. So many of these titles were lost and only in my warm memories of youthful play, now I have a hard working copy to peek into. I still have boxed copies of games from that time, but most are unplayable so that collecting avenue for me has lost its appeal.
Boxed games have largely lost their appeal to me, I only kept a handful (C&C 1, Baldur's gate 2, Diablo 2 and a couple more). Like many members here, I made a "Great Purge" when I ran out of space while still living at my parent's house as a teenager and I threw away most game boxes. Including some very neat ones like Daggerfall and Crusader and even *sniff* Little Big Adventure. That was heartless but I really had no more space! I did keep the CDs for a couple more years and I still have Little Big Adventure but got rid of most games, giving them away to friends for free.
mintee: Sure I'll buy the next blockbuster that tickles my fancy, but I think I am done for the older games, having bought up most that I was interested in and learned the hard lesson that buying a title on deep sale that you really are not into in the first place wont make you want to play it later. (yah, im looking at you RPG bundle pack)
so perhaps my addiction buster was just binging till I puked?
Ha, I almost bought the complete Ultima series but then I realized, I didn't even completely finish any of those games back in the day where I had more patience for these types of games, so realistically I'd not play through the entire Ultima series now. Nostalgia makes you want to buy all those games but nostalgia isn't enough to get you through even one of those titles. You can't really speedrun that stuff.
Dashe: I had a compulsive buying problem when I was in middle school and high school. Since it was retail-only it's only about 300 games, and I've sold 30 already...but I still want to get my money's worth so I won't sell a game until I've beaten it. Back then I would rush out to the game store as soon as I scraped together $60 (or $30 if it was for the Game Boy), to the point where I'd go out researching games around my birthday and Christmas well after I got into other hobbies just out of habit. The real problem now is that I really, really suck at games, and most of my 'beating' involves blitzing through with walkthroughs right there next to me, especially with point-n-clicks.
I bought only very few games during middle school / high school, maybe a handful per year at the very most, I'd estimate one game every 3 months or so. The rest was copied or borrowed from other people at school. Since I went to a small school with only about 200 students, I knew pretty much every single gamer. That was back in the day when gamers where still an identifiable demographic. Before classes started, I sometimes went to classroom A to get a game and trade it for a game I got from classroom C, it was quite complicated but if everyone buys just a couple games then you can lend and borrow for nearly all eternity without anyone having to break the bank.
Dashe: I only really get tempted to buy things when they're 80% off or higher, and the only bundle thing that got me was the Nordic deal. I said to myself that if my mom spent more money on me for Christmas when I was a baby and she was living paycheck to paycheck, then I'd get it, and then when I asked her and she wanted to know the details of the sale, she just shouted,
"Buy that crap, you dolt! It takes up no physical space and I would probably buy bulk handbags if that sale were offered to me in handbag form!" Whenever I get tempted by a really awesome deal otherwise and it's just one game, I just gift it at checkout and figure if I decide a few months later that I really just wanted the satisfaction of paying under two dollars for something usually marked a lot higher, I'll set it aside for a giveaway.
Good idea about purchasing as gift code rather than directly adding to the shelf, and thanks for the laugh with the handbags story!
Dashe: The only real threat to my backlog is the free stuff. Since I'm so bad at gaming, the number of freebies I snap up usually exceeds the number of games I'm physically able to beat over the course of a year. GOG gives away a lot of free stuff, and not grabbing a free game while it's free is like the digital equivalent of going to Costco and passing up the free samples. So my goal here is to beat more games than I acquire through any means, and I guess never ask my mom for bundle advice again. :P
I don't see free games as a threat, if it's stuff I know I won't play due to hardware restrictions then I don't even redeem it, Witcher 2 for example.