I have almost 1000 Steam games, hundreds of Switch games, and probably just as many PlayStation games. I couldn't finish all the games before the Grim Reaper comes to take me to the Great Arcade In The Sky, so why do we keep buying more? It's time to stop, and four things in particular convinced me to wake up and smell the fiscal responsibility by taking a year-long break from buying video games.
Yes, I know. Adjusted for inflation, video games are actually cheaper now than ever, but $70 is still a significant chunk of change! While I would love to try new games like Stellar Blade, I know it's going to cost half within a few months of launch and the only thing I get for that extra money is a way to avoid FOMO. While it feels nice to be keep up with the gaming Joneses, it's not worth the cost! Just buying one new game a month would get you close to $1000 a year, and you know just one isn't that much.
Our game-buying abstinence does not include game subscription services. PlayStation Plus and Game Pass are a part of my monthly subscription budget, and for the cost of one AAA game each, I can have an entire year of access to these libraries, which will do more than enough to satisfy my desire to play more recent titles. I know titles like God of War Ragnarök, which I will only play once anyway, will come to a subscription service eventually. So with just a bit of patience, there's no real pressure to buy anything outright.
I already alluded to this, but thanks to game bundles, free game giveaways on PC, and a never-ending procession of sales of older but still awesome games, I've built up an enormous library of digital titles over the last thirteen years since I first started buying digital games. Just my Nintendo Switch library alone would be enough to take me through the next decade, if I'm being honest.
With so many "bangers" (as the kids like to say) in my
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