Do. Not. Ask. I am beyond trying to make sense of the Prime Gaming offer now. The information in the "blog" that Amazon sends out each month, usually late, doesn't match what I see when I go to the website.
The blog itself, which is in fact a press release, so why they call it a blog beats me - it's not like blogs are fashionable any more - is laid out so chaotically it's actively off-putting, with huge lists of games in various formats that repeat themselves and overlap. I can't be bothered trying to unpick it any more.
There's this whole, rolling release schedule that makes no sense, particularly since the whole supposed thrill of the new they seemed to be trying to inculcate, whereby we'd all rush to get the next batch of games each week, is completely undermined by most of the games then sitting there for a month or more, waiting to be picked like a bunch of schoolkids hoping for a spot in the team.
Add to that a whole new bunch of games they're throwing in just now in anticipation of Prime Day (Which actually lasts about a week so clearly the entire company shares the same lack of interest in calling anything by its proper name or acknowledging any kind of conventional calendar.) and it just all becomes so much more trouble to decode than it could possibly be worth.
Much easier just to check the website every couple of weeks and claim whatever's new that looks good. Who cares what offer its in or when it arrived or when it's leaving? Snapshot and be done with it, I say!
The games I claimed at the end of June were:
Stray GodsNot Stray Gods: Orpheus as it says above but let's not get into all that again. Already covered in a previous post. Naturally, I haven't played it yet. I haven't played any of the games I claimed. Let's be realistic - I don't claim them to play them. I claim them so I'll have them should I ever want to play them, which I most likely won't. I'd love to blame it on late-stage capitalism but actually I think it's more likely just me.
The Last Show of Mr. Chardish75% off in the Steam Summer Sale with a "Very Positive" review rating, although since that's only from 71 reviews and the game came out five years ago, I'm not sure it has much authority. More like no-one's really tried it. It's a puzzle mystery game about an actress who goes back to an abandoned theater to recall her past history with the eponymous director. Mostly I took this one because the screenshots looked pretty.
Fate: Undiscovered Realms20% off in the sale with a Very Positive rating. The sequel to FATE, which I may or may not own on some platform or other. Certainly never played it. It's a dungeon crawler and I occasionally get the fleeting urge to play one of those so I guess it's good to have one on hand for those few minutes every decade or so. The screenshots are incredibly blurry for something that's supposed to encourage people to want to buy it. I hope the game doesn't actually look like that...Dark Envoy64% off in the sale with a Mostly Positive rating. Even the highlighted pro reviews they've chosen to promote it on the store page are lukewarm at best so I don't have a lot of hope for this but then it's often better to go in expecting nothing much and be mildly surprised to find its not as bad as you thought it would be than to anticipate greatness and get something that's merely very good. It's a "cRPG", which is a term though we'd gotten rid of around the turn of the millennium, when we stopped putting the word "computer" in front of everything we needed a computer for. Baldur's Gate on a budget is what they mean, anyway. A very small budget...Wild Country20% off and Mixed. Mixed is not good. It's a "cozy-competitive" card game, whatever the heck that means. I don't play many deck-builders, mostly because I find building decks about as engaging as picking talents from a talent tree. I thought these were exactly the kind of tedious, faux-administrative tasks computers were designed to do for us but apparently in some quarters they're considered to be too enjoyable to hand off to a machine. I picked this one despite the genre and mechanics because it has amusing-looking funny animals, some of whom wear hats.All of those are probably from June's offer, if anyone cares. July's offer looks poor so far but I don't remember most of the games I've just been talking about coming up in the conversation when June's slate was announced so I'm hopeful something better will turn up, unnanounced.
Of the July games available so far, I've only taken one:
TOEMThis one has a massive 80% off in the Steam sale right now and and Overwhelmingly Positive rating. It's a hand-drawn, black-and-white photography adventure in which you wander about, chatting to a bunch of people and solving their problems by taking photographs. You'd think, given the crazy amount of screenshots I take, I'd be all over photo games but I've only ever played one or two. Should make a nice change of pace when I'm in the mood. When that's going to be is another question.And since I've been plugging the Steam Sale all through this post, it's nice to be able to end with something I actually bought there! Yes, I paid money for a game, something that seems hard to justify given how many games I get for free and how many of those I haven't even looked at yet, but it was sooo cheap...
Steins;GateA whopping 90% off and Overwhelmingly Positive. Also the only game I've ever seen to use a semi-colon in the title in quite such an aggressive manner. It looks right in my wheelhouse, being "a time-travel, science fiction interactive visual novel". Can't really walk away from something like that.Obviously, I haven't played it yet. The description on the Steam page gleefully claims "30-50 hours of reading time", which is something I've never seen offered as a positive feature of a video game before. I could read several full-length novels in thirty hours, let alone fifty, so the writing damn well better be good!
And that's my list of acquisitions for June and the very beginning of July. I'm still wavering on a couple of wishlist purchases in the dying days of the sale. As I just suggested, it's increasingly hard to justify buying anything even at huge discounts unless I absolutely, positively need to play it right now. For a time it made sense to build up a cushion of games to fall back on should the need arise but I think I'm fully furnished with those now.
I'll take a bet with myself that, when I post about the Steam Winter Sale, as I inevitably will, I won't have played Steins;Gate or any other games I might buy in the Summer Sale.
If I win that bet, will I also have lost it?