800 in dark souls 3 and elden ring, just over 100 in dark souls remastered and dark souls 2, and all the rest are pretty evenly distributed from 1 to 80
Gaming
From video gaming to card games and stuff in between, if it's gaming you can probably discuss it here!
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According to steam I have some games with 100 to 120 hours (Dead Cells, XCOM, Rogue Legacy 2 and Hades). I prefer story driven games to be 20-30 hours, but keep replaying short sessions of single-player roguelites.
I think I've played more than 120 hours on Magic Arena but don't have the hours tracked. It's one of those games that give you incentive for playing every day and grinding a number of wins, and I've done that for maybe 3 months, then got tired and dropped it. I like the idea of replaying a game and getting better at it, but not the log in and grind everyday part of online games.
I noticed I have a really sharp motivation drop after ~300h that is usually the point where i would say I am competent in a game and would need to put a lot of effort into to bocome better and reach the top ranks. And that is just not worth it for me. I mostly enjoy learning a game, figuring stuff out on my own is a large part of my enjoyment. I only have two games on steam with 500+ hours and those are Factorio and Stellaris. Factorio just took me a longer time to get bored of. Stellaris I usually play in ~30h bursts twice a year after a new dlc drops and changes the game completely. So everytime is a new game to learn which I really like.
There are a handful of games that I've logged more than 100 hours in. I tend to get bored. Right now, I am enjoying Tears of the Kingdom and approaching that burnout period. There are enough side quests to maybe keep me going for another week or two, but I am getting ready to just complete the main quest and stop playing. I almost never replay games because I'd much rather be exploring something new.
I tend to primarily play JRPGs and RPGs in general. The Xeno games have resonated strongly with me (all Xenoblade and Xenogears) over the past few years and each game has taken 100-200 hours each to complete. Hard to resist exploring the worlds in games like this and even the silliest sidequests can end up being a blast (and take you to unexplored areas of the map).
I've got a few games I sink tons and tons of hours into, mainly Skullgirls, Them's Fightin' Herds, Splatoon 3, and Slay the Spire. I'd like to make more time to finish story-driven stuff though.
I've played the crap out of slay the spire. One of my all time favourite games. But I really struggle to convince anyone of why it's great...
Just bought it on my mobile, and now have the fun of completing it again.
I end up gravitating towards favorite games that I play tons of, as well as additional games that I play through once for the experience.
The "core game" I keep coming back to these days has been XCOM 2, which I never really got tired of.
While I'm no completionist, it takes me a LONG time for me to finish games. Whether it be because I bounce between multiple games (Street Fighter 6 and Tears of the Kingdom currently), I do nearly everything in a game, or I set a stupid challenge for myself. I like to kneecap myself for no discernible reason in video games and TTRPGs. I'm attempting a 4 (but might be 3 soon) heart run in Tears of the Kingdom on my first run through. Why? Shrug
Objective numbers: Steam tells me my most player game is Tabletop Simulator, but that one doesn't really count since it's lots of different games. My second most played game is still Destiny 2 at 285 hours, despite the fact that I stopped playing years ago. My most played non-steam game – also my most played game by quite a large margin – is Final Fantasy XIV, at 990 hours.
My favorite game I've played so far this year has been Citizen Sleeper, and that took me around 13¼ hours. Pentiment is probably my second favorite of the year, and that one took like 16¾ hours. I've done one playthrough of Disco Elysium and at 33¾ hours that one was starting to feel a bit long. Webbed was a really fun experience that felt nice and bite sized, and that one got 7½ hours. The most memorable game I played last year was probably Before Your Eyes, and that game is about two hours long!
Subjective thoughts and feelings: These days I much prefer games that keep themselves contained. I've got one big game I'm investing a lot of time in (FFXIV), but that's over the course of years and also a game played with friends, which I feel changes the dynamic. For solo games I look for things that tell a compelling story or offer a compelling gameplay experience, and don't feel the need to pad out gameplay to 200 hours (so most AAAs are kinda out for me these days).
I'm just busier these days than I used to be. Most nights when I get home from the lab I've got 4, maybe 5 hours free if I have leftovers and don't need to cook, there are no chores, I don't need to go grocery shopping, etc. Some nights I'll want to use those hours playing FFXIV with my friends. Some nights I'll want to work on other hobbies. Some nights I'll just be tired and want to lay down to read or watch someone else play some games on YouTube.
So even though a game like Disco Elysium only took a bit under 34 hours to finish, that was spread over like a week of evenings dedicated only to playing that game. I will admit to having lost sleep for Citizen Sleeper (ironically); I beat that one in about 2 days despite the length, because it was compelling enough to really not want to put it down. And Webbed I beat in its entirety in one long weekend day (plus coming back the next day to 100% it, something I almost never do anymore).
All over the map here. As of late I tend to be more focused and am putting in many hours to fewer games. If you look at my trophy list or anything else that keeps track, I have an extensive list of games I have only played a few hours of.
Honestly, neither makes you a “gamer.” Enjoying gaming is what makes you a gamer. Doesn’t matter if that is one game or a hundred games.
35-40 hrs per week roughly split between FFXIV and CoD MW2.