112 Operator is more realistic; for one thing, it doesn’t give street addresses to interstate highways. LIke the Capital Beltway.
I see 112 is currently five bucks (that’s 80% off) on Steam.
112 Operator is more realistic; for one thing, it doesn’t give street addresses to interstate highways. LIke the Capital Beltway.
I see 112 is currently five bucks (that’s 80% off) on Steam.
I played that game a couple times some years ago when it was called CritiCall
2 free weekends on steam:
and
Also, on ubisoft connect, you can play The Crew Motorsport for up to 5 hours as a free trial over the next 3 days.
Reminds me of Limbo and Inside.
The Night of the Rabbit is free for a couple of days on GOG.
It’s a 10-year-old point and click story-based adventure with anthropomorphic animals. I haven’t played it yet but it looks gorgeous.
Today on Epic:
Today on GOG:
Today on Epic:
Weirdly, either navigating directly or in through the free games page, that game prices at 16.99 for me.
It has worked for me, claimed it for free. I will never play it.
Heh, this goes for 98% of my free game collection as well. But the price is right, so why not?
I had a quick look. I’ve got 288 games listed on my Epic library. I’ve bought 2 - Airbourne Kingdom and Satisfactory - and the rest are all free. I’ve launched 19. It doesn’t seem to tell me how long I’ve played for, but it does order by time played - I don’t think I’ve play more than 5 for more than an hour
I don’t understand grabbing a free game unless it seems like a game I would legitimately enjoy. I liken it to an unlimited DVR. Even if I could store infinite recordings, I still wouldn’t record anything other than what I actually want to watch.
EDIT: Looking now, I have 36 “titles”, but Death Stranding is listed twice. The ones I’ve played extensively are Subnautica, Control, Frostpunk, and Aven Colony, though with that last one, after 50 hours I switched over to an 800+ hour Cities: Skylines rabbit hole on Steam. Most of the 36 are games I’d like to give a shot, with the most notable being Prey, Wolfenstein New Order, Alien: Isolation and Death Stranding.
Of note is that I’ve actually bought Subnautica, Control and Frostpunk on Steam after playing them on Epic for free. That’s how much I hate using non-steam launchers…
I don’t grab games that I have zero interest in. I get games when I know for sure I’d want to play them, or even when I think there’s a chance I would play them. The vast majority of games in my libraries are things I won’t play because I don’t have time. But there is nothing in there that I think is a bad game or totally uninteresting.
I grabbed a bunch of free games mostly to fuck with EA. I haven’t picked up a free game for a while now. We’ll see if I ever do again.
Does it cost them money? Because if so, fair enough and well played.
I concur with your thinking, but I’m building a library for when I (hopefully never) am relegated to a retirement facility. I’m not going to spend a lot of time playing checkers or spades. And there’s no telling how my gaming tastes will have changed by then.
I also don’t plan on playing Fortnite and screaming at some kid that I fucked their mother AND their grandmothers.
I tried it from here and it wanted me to click on pictures of cars with convertible tops, I’m done with captchas. I will try it on another computer.
I’m between @Projammer’s and @EllisDee’s camps. I’ll pick up anything that I -think- I -might- want to play, but won’t automatically take anything even if it’s free. So, for example, Truberbrook, unlikely that I’d ever play, but possible. Taken.
Godlike Burger? Nope, not my think at all.
But having a huge backlog of games was nice during lockdown, would be nice if I had an extended illness, and if backwards compatibility / hacks remain a thing, will likely be nice if I make it to any sort of retirement.