I succumbed to latent nerdiness and created an Excel spreadsheet for my game collection. It’s a little shameful.
(Note: I sell most of the games I finish, but even so… my track record for finishing games –or even starting them– isn’t that hot.)
I succumbed to latent nerdiness and created an Excel spreadsheet for my game collection. It’s a little shameful.
(Note: I sell most of the games I finish, but even so… my track record for finishing games –or even starting them– isn’t that hot.)

Comments
“It’s not *that* nerdy to make a spreadsheet of a game collection,” says the guy who typed up his own list, wrote the HTML for the table and then posted it online too. (Neither action though beats a friends of mine who typed up all of his collections — books, DVDs/Blu-rays and games — and then wrote the software himself to dynamically sort it by title, year and other attributes. *He’s* a nerd.)
Also, I recommend Fallout 3. For, you know, no reason in particular.
My favorite part was the thing that says “Minecraft: Ongoing.” Boy, that says it all, doesn’t it?
This is great idea, I would prefer to have this online as part of some clever gaming social network, but I might start my own Excel sheet. I would probably add column for “lenght of the game” (taken from howlongtobeat.com) as it sometimes is big part of my decision process what game should I play next (not much time left for gaming these days). I will use this as an inspiration.
I’m glad to see FFXIII so high up that list. I honestly think it’s terrifically underrated. Meta and great character melodrama don’t sell a game for most people, sadly.
Bludr: what you want basically exists in the form of http://www.backloggery.com/