Every time I use Steam’s discovery queue or any “what to play next” site, I get bombarded with stuff from the last 6 months. I get it - that’s what generates clicks and sales - but it’s genuinely unhelpful for how most of us here actually want to play.

I’ve been quietly working on a tool to change that. The core idea - your taste doesn’t have an expiration date, so recommendations shouldn’t either. Something from 2011 that fits exactly what you’re looking for should surface just as easily as a 2024 release.

It’s early and rough around the edges, but I’m at the point where I want to validate whether this is even a problem worth solving for other people or just a me.

If a recommendation algorithm for games like this existed - smarter discovery that actually respects older games - would you use it?

What features would make it genuinely useful vs just another thing you try once and forget about? I want it to be the tool someone actually recommends to a friend, not just upvotes and forgets.

  • YUART@lemmy.zipOP
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    2 hours ago

    Hi, I see, thanks for your thoughts. I often have similar feeling, but in my case it mainly caused by the fact that I like multiplayer/MMO games and current multiplayer/MMO games are trash, and old one I loved to play have servers offline for a long time now.

    Maybe you should just relax for a little and switch to something else like tabletop games, or even to movies/series/books.

    The only recommendation I can give you that worked for me a few years ago - try VR games if you still haven’t. I guarantee that you will be positively shocked by experience even if you have just a headset (you don’t need a west, a treadmill, etc.). The cons of that solution is the you need rather powerful PC (the best VR games now exist only on PC, games that run directly on a headset 90% of time are bad) + you need to buy a VR headset (but I recommend you to buy used one, Quest 3 for overall ok experience, Valve Index if you have money, Quest 2 or Pico 4 if you low on money) + there is only a bunch of VR games exist that are worth playing, so after a while you may be bored.

    • Hond@piefed.social
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      2 hours ago

      Thanks, very thoughtful reply!

      Agreed, VR is pretty awesome and owning a Pico 4 i can confirm its a pretty good headset on the budget side. With a bit of criminal energy even most of the quest exclusives like RE4 VR work on the Pico. With WiVRn it works even on Linux for PCVR which is pretty awesome. But atm i use it mostly for watching movies. I’m playing VR since 2019 and kinda seen almost every wortwhile game. Especially PCVR is imho in a pretty sad state nowadays when it comes to new titles. Meta bankrolled a few exclusive bangers in the last few years but even that seems to have come to an end sadly.

      Last fall/winter i had a pretty good run with https://retroachievements.org/ and played through 6-8 classics. Titles are pretty well tagged so its easy to find something which speaks to you and they can be added to your “want to play” list. Never was a big fan of achievements but for this retro stuff it gave me the sometimes needed additional carrot on a stick. What helped me is to order the games to average completion times(not mastering times) and find games which take 5-10 hours. Having bit sized experiences felt less like a big commitment.

      • YUART@lemmy.zipOP
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        32 minutes ago

        Nice to see you tried VR already. Yeah, VR games are in hopeless condition unfortunately. I really hope I can return one day, maybe Steam Frame release will change anything, we will see.

        Thanks for sharing that webpage with retro games, appreciated 👍