Zabinatrix: I've just realized why I can never really get excited about strategy game promos. I do love strategy games, it's just that they usually have way too much replay value.
That might seem like a strange reason, but the thing is - I already have a lot of strategy games. Once you have a couple of good real time and a couple of good turn-based in some different settings, I feel like you're kind of set. You can just come back and play those.
That's why I love adventure game promos. They are often great games, but have limited replay value. So even though I already have lots of adventure games I can still get another one and feel like it adds to the collection in a different way than yet another strategy game does.
This comment should not be seen as a whiny "You should only do the kind of promos I like!"-kind of thing. I understand that not all promos will be to my liking - I'm just kind of curious if others feel the same way about strategy games.
This is an argument against buying more games in general, not just strategy games. It's a good and interesting one, though.
I tend to like to have two settings for the game types I like -- fantasy and futuristic. Sometimes I also like "more or less" historical takes on a genre. So I enjoyed Age of Empires but also Total Annihilation, and would be easily tempted to buy the other if I had only one of them. And I was easily tempted by Company of Heroes, which had a more closely historical flair to it than did Age of Empires.
I can still be inspired to buy new games, though, no matter how good the games I've already got are. That is especially the case when multiplayer capability comes into the picture. The ability to play against (and with) a vast community is very exciting and key to my experiences of playing RTS's and FPS's, as well as MMORPG's. In fact I am leery of buying any games in certain genres, even ones that might be great, if there is a good chance there will be no one to play them against.
If you are not satisfied with the eventually predictable AI in your games, then you can't, after all, test your wits against a non-existent community of players. So as older games lose their player baser, I have to find new games.
One of the bigger questions for me is whether I have time to get the comfort and in-depth understanding I will need to enjoy a new game. There is only so much time in life, and the older you get, the less you want to squander it. I love the new, but the question for me isn't so much whether to get a new game as whether to do something besides play a game. A really good game can easily take many weeks out of my life. Would I want it to?