What do you guys use? I personally like Glitchwave for it’s powerful chart building and the user reviews as a whole tend to align with my own.

Backloggd also pretty cool but a little more limited to use, and harder to dig up the old old stuff as its algorithms strongly favor newer.

Anyone else use these or have recommendations of their own?

  • MentalEdge
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    1 year ago

    I honestly just browse steam…

    I follow games publishing pretty closely. If something seems interesting, I add it to my wishlist and forget about it.

    When I feel like actually buying a new game, I open up my wishlist and sort by discount. Once you have a couple hundred games wishlisted, something is always on sale. Sometimes the steam emails that something is on sale, awakens the itch to play a particular game, too.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I use a wide variety of stuff, for example:

    • Reddit and lemmy threads
    • Internet searches for “games like X”
    • indie “best of” lists online
    • friends and coworkers
    • YouTube reviews of bigger titles, esp. the comments where people compare to other games
    • bundle sales, like on Fanatical and Humble
    • look up other games from devs who made other games I like

    I don’t use Steam recommendations or any of those “tools” for finding new games. I just find I get better results from the above than from any recommendation engine.

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    Steam Discovery/New Releases Queue! I’ve found a tonne of cool games, both old and new and popular and niche, just by flicking through the queues when I wanted something new to play.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      IDK, I’ve been through like 20 queues (I have 162 games viewed) and have maybe found one or two interesting games. I get far more success just searching “best indie games” or “games like X” or threads on Reddit/lemmy recommendation threads (by far my biggest source of wishlisted games).

      Yeah, I usually find these gems a year or two late, but that’s kind of the point of patient gaming, right? I probably also miss a ton of gems, but I don’t have time to play the games I already have, so I don’t worry about it.

      I still do try the queue from time to time, but mostly because watching trailers is sometimes fun.

    • Techognito
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      21 year ago

      This is how you end up with way too many games in the wishlist

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      Steam discovery saw me playing a bunch of building games and showed me From the Depths. What an absolute gem, I would never have found it otherwise. Avorion too.

  • @glau
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    61 year ago

    I’m afraid I’m a victim of algorithms because I pretty much only look at stuff from GOG and Steam front pages or games that are recommended as ‘similar’ over there. And of course youtube.

    As a side note. I should even stop checking those because I just keep playing the same games nowadays instead of chipping away at my backlog.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    This sub, haha. I had never heard of Omori until someone mentioned it here, I looked it up and it had like all 10 out of 10 reviews in every category, I had to check it out and I am glad I started playing it (Not finished yet, don’t spoil anything).

  • @sonovebitch
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    21 year ago

    https://m.youtube.com/user/ssethtzeentach

    Some of the games I’ve spent the most time on are games I’ve discovered through his channel (Dwarf Fortress, Caves Of Qud, Hardspace Shipbreaker, HighFleet, Synthetik, etc…).

    I also like to browse grey market aggregators to snatch cheap stuff on discount.

    Other than that, Steam sales popup, GamePass, Lemmy PatientGamers.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      I don’t think grey market is ethical… You better off pirating games than paying the thieves.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Exactly. I used to occasionally buy from grey markets due to cost, but then I realized where they tend to get their keys.

        Either buy from an established store, or pirate.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    Unfortunately, Youtube is still easily the best. Like, even something as straightforward of a channel as Nintendo World Report gave me awareness of Paranormasight.

    I’d love something more formally defined, but nah, the stream of consciousness that is a bunch of small creators making background content has been the better solution.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      SplatterCat, AlphaBetaGamer, MandaloreGaming… any other good YouTubers for game discovery? Also RIP TotalBiscuit, he was the best of them all.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 months ago

    I do! I have recommendations! I use this site myself, meaning it is not something I have heard about from my cousin thrice-removed. I use https://gg.deals to find good game bargains. They include all of the official stores and for those who want to, also keyshops. On the site note, GG.deals has a sister site in Poland for those who speak Polish and don’t speak English, it is https://lowcygier.pl.

  • TabbyCat
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    11 year ago

    Something I did was create a list on How Long to Beat of games I don’t want to play, sort by most popular, and filter out those games and ones in your Want to Play list too. It’s not really recommendations at all but it was a good way to look at new games you havent seen before. In terms of getting recommendations, finding a YouTuber with similar taste in games as you could be a good way to do it.

  • Beefalo
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    11 year ago

    I’ve got a couple of Youtube channels I follow, ChristopherOdd and Splattercatgaming, who seem to mostly charge through a lot of indy content, giving it a whirl so you can check it out. So that helps to surface anything interesting happening outside AAA studios.

    That and just waiting for recs to come from word of mouth.