Posted October 24, 2011
So, I never really used them. Didn't understood the concept back then when it was introduced. Now I wanted to give them a chance. So I went to the catalogue page and looked over the mixes... "Games that everyone should experience" is a little meaningless title, and behind that the list consists of the usual suspects. Didn't help me a lot. But wait. Who would call a mix "Win a GOG game free"? And why is there the same text everywhere? Where is the damn dislike button, when you need it.
Okay, up for some useful mixes. "Learn how to sell your mother in four easy steps" catched my attention. After clicking on it it even made sense. Good trade simulations is the topic. But the introductionary text of each game and the total list is very short (and apparently limited by the function itself).
The Multilinguals, Works on Linux/Wine, Max, Espagnol, Italian, lists probably make sense. However I would solve this thing by user tagging the games with keywords. After all these are not matters of opinion.
Great cRPGs we have a lot of mixes but they are essentially equal. And there is no order within the lists. So no way to find out from all these mixes what are the 3 best cRPGs...
Next try, I go to a games page (Age of Wonders). I am looking for similar but better games and hope to get a hint for MoM or HoMM2/3.
I see the unfamous "Win a GOG game free" mix, the "working on netbooks" mix and the "here be dragons", "Juegos en Espagnol" mix. I find HoMM2/3. I don't find MoM.
I find them both in the "Customers who bought this game also bought..." section.
All in all I think that keyword tagging might be a better solution, when it's only about classification. Maybe a special tagging category (similar games).
So, are you using GOG mixes?
Do you think they are useful?
How could they be made more useful?
Okay, up for some useful mixes. "Learn how to sell your mother in four easy steps" catched my attention. After clicking on it it even made sense. Good trade simulations is the topic. But the introductionary text of each game and the total list is very short (and apparently limited by the function itself).
The Multilinguals, Works on Linux/Wine, Max, Espagnol, Italian, lists probably make sense. However I would solve this thing by user tagging the games with keywords. After all these are not matters of opinion.
Great cRPGs we have a lot of mixes but they are essentially equal. And there is no order within the lists. So no way to find out from all these mixes what are the 3 best cRPGs...
Next try, I go to a games page (Age of Wonders). I am looking for similar but better games and hope to get a hint for MoM or HoMM2/3.
I see the unfamous "Win a GOG game free" mix, the "working on netbooks" mix and the "here be dragons", "Juegos en Espagnol" mix. I find HoMM2/3. I don't find MoM.
I find them both in the "Customers who bought this game also bought..." section.
All in all I think that keyword tagging might be a better solution, when it's only about classification. Maybe a special tagging category (similar games).
So, are you using GOG mixes?
Do you think they are useful?
How could they be made more useful?