dsheinem
dsheinem
dsheinem

If only Steve Jobs had loved chemo, we could ask him.

When Bill Bellichick heard the news of this report earlier tonight, he promptly fired the team's equipment manager for failing to do his fucking job right by not under-inflating that 12th goddamned football.

Well you sir can go fuck yourself. If you don't like the tourists at a tourist attraction, don't fucking live near it. And your thinly veiled threat about murdering tourists is absolutely disgusting. YOU can't control the flow of the public on public grounds, nor do you have the right to.

Awesome. All it needs is the game's HowLongToBeat value.

One More Tip for Beating Your Backlog

Embrace the accessibility of digital, mobile and portable games.

This is a great goal, and services like Steam can help to make things easier. After beating a game, I tag it with "Completed" and then the year. That groups all of my completed games together by year.

Then I have a tag called "Not Interested" for when I find a game that I just don't like. Every once and a while I'll

I just developed a system within my Steam Library organization to sort out games that have been finished.

1. "Easy" difficulty can be your friend, if you're willing to accept it.

<3 spreadsheets. Pictured above is my "Backlog" sheet. Below, is my "History" sheet with similar stats to what you mentioned. I like the idea of a "number of times beaten", but my current setup doesn't allow for that.

Haha, I love this solution. Took me a second to realize how you accomplished this in Explorer. I use a spreadsheet on Google. I've got cells pulling in data from Metacritic and HowLongToBeat real time (unfortunately Google limits you to 50 data calls, so I favored Metacritic).

I've tried a few times to manage my backlog using a database, either local or web-based, but always found it too time consuming. In the end, I came up with the perfect (for me) solution right there, in Windows Explorer:

Hats off you. I'm currently doing a podcast project called Year of Shame Challenge 2 centred around beating games clearing the backlog but all whilst not buying any new games...it's going ok but none of us gonna have beat any games close to the rate you managed.

You've got good taste healthy amount of JRPGs, kirbys and some nice bullethells.

This inspires me to take my backlog a bit more seriously. It's so huge! And it goes back generations!