PC gamers spend 92% of their time on older games, oh and there are apparently 908 million of us now
PC gamers spend 92% of their time on older games, oh and there are apparently 908 million of us now

Feels like Destiny.

PC gamers spend 92% of their time on older games, oh and there are apparently 908 million of us now
Feels like Destiny.
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I have hundreds of games on steam.
I mostly play minecraft.
My games library is so huge, and I suffer from choice paralysis all the time.
You might get some use out of this Steam randomizer, I've used it before when I can't pick what to play. You can apply filters too.
⭐w⭐ Thanks!
Terraria. Every time I fire up the deck to buy a new game, a few days later I am back to Terraria.
I suppose in a few months, after this current round of Minecraft, I'll be pulled into Terraria again. I had a pretty good head of steam on the way to finishing my 2 year old run of BG3 when I made the mistake of opening Minecraft... Terraria is about the only thing that could rival minecraft in addictive qualities for me. It has the added benefit that I can talk my wife into playing Terraria but she won't touch minecraft.
There's a group working on a terraria mod pack with all of the big mods with custom integrations. It's very cool.
I like the game (as well as the similar Starbound) but every time I play it, I wish that it had more ability to create stuff that does things. Like, more Noita-style interactions with the world or Factorio-style automation. The stuff you can make is mostly static.
I die too fast in Noita to get too deep into it... I liked what I played of it though. Something about Starbound made it feel like Temu Terraria... I can't put my finger on why it feels so ... fake? Like physics or the way the player model moves and interacts with blocks is off or something. Maybe it is just too close to Terraria and the many hours I spent in Terraria makes anything close feel off.
Have you looked at mods? I'm sure I saw an auomation mod for Terraria a while back.
Same might be true for starbound. But I don't know much about its mods.
This 100%. I looooove Noita and any deep systems-driven games where players explore, discover, and create content for years.
One of my favourite things is the sudden discovery that a game is much bigger and more open-ended than I thought. Especially when it happens dozens of hours in.
I've been playing a lot of terraria with my son recently, it's been a lot of fun going back to it. Coincidentally, I just saw the trailer for Noita for the first time last night, and thought "woah, that looks cool as hell..."