Mister 44
New member
Like most of you fellow PC Gamers, I've been struggling with Steam Sale Hording Induced Trauma (S.S.H.I.T.). And it started to influence my gaming pleasure. Whenever I finished a game, I would look through my unplayed list for the Next On Backlog (N.O.B.) and find that the backlog has grown by 3, 4 or even more while I've only completed 1.
So I had a one-on-one intervention with myself and I devised a cunning plan.

I was going to stop buying Steam games (sale or otherwise) until I have completed a large chunk of my backlog. Being practical, I've decided that any wallet funds from card sales may be spend as I wished.
How did this work out for me? I purchased 3 games during the summer sale (Indie titles from my wishlist, financed purely with card sales).
And the last few purchases bought with real money:
The Jackbox Part Pack -> 2015/05/07
The Golf Club (gifted to a forum member in the spirit of the pay-it-forward thread) -> 2015/03/06
South Park: Stick of Truth -> 2014/12/27
Yeah, I made this decision a quite a while back. Since I bought Stick of Truth, I have completed 16 games and moved 7 to to my "Don't Like" folder. And I need to finish a few more games before I get back into the sale game. But some of the money I saved went to my GTX 1070 which should come in handy once I start buying the newer games again.
Only problem is that my wishlist is growing very quickly...
Final words of wisdom to keep in mind when the next sale roles into town:
Through careful and systematic analysis, I have come to the conclusion that the price of games rarely increases. Yes, it will drop in a sale and then go back to pre-sale prices, but a year from now it won't cost more than it did today. In fact, it is likely to cost even less
So if the normal price drops, it will cost even less next time it is 50% off.
"Duh", you say. But here's the wisdom: Never bite off more than you can chew. When sale time comes, buy only what you know you'll play until the next sale because there is no point in spending money on a game you'll only play two years from now.
Trust me. I'm the Mister.
So how is your backlog going? Any tactics in place or planned?
So I had a one-on-one intervention with myself and I devised a cunning plan.

I was going to stop buying Steam games (sale or otherwise) until I have completed a large chunk of my backlog. Being practical, I've decided that any wallet funds from card sales may be spend as I wished.
How did this work out for me? I purchased 3 games during the summer sale (Indie titles from my wishlist, financed purely with card sales).
And the last few purchases bought with real money:
The Jackbox Part Pack -> 2015/05/07
The Golf Club (gifted to a forum member in the spirit of the pay-it-forward thread) -> 2015/03/06
South Park: Stick of Truth -> 2014/12/27
Yeah, I made this decision a quite a while back. Since I bought Stick of Truth, I have completed 16 games and moved 7 to to my "Don't Like" folder. And I need to finish a few more games before I get back into the sale game. But some of the money I saved went to my GTX 1070 which should come in handy once I start buying the newer games again.
Only problem is that my wishlist is growing very quickly...
Final words of wisdom to keep in mind when the next sale roles into town:
Through careful and systematic analysis, I have come to the conclusion that the price of games rarely increases. Yes, it will drop in a sale and then go back to pre-sale prices, but a year from now it won't cost more than it did today. In fact, it is likely to cost even less
So if the normal price drops, it will cost even less next time it is 50% off.
"Duh", you say. But here's the wisdom: Never bite off more than you can chew. When sale time comes, buy only what you know you'll play until the next sale because there is no point in spending money on a game you'll only play two years from now.
Trust me. I'm the Mister.
So how is your backlog going? Any tactics in place or planned?