- Dec 29, 2010
- 3,034
- 1
- 81
So I've been so close to upgrading my GPU. However, I've also been accumulating games on Steam, GOG, Greenman, etc., by buying them when they go on sale. I happened to miss a lot of games earlier, so I have a backlog that includes some games that aren't so new.
Anyway, sometimes I'd buy a game like Metro 2033 and think OK I need to upgrade my video card and play that.
But in the end, I just made a spreadsheet in Google Docs that has the game and release date, then sorted the list by year.
It was like a revelation to see all the older games I can play, that were released before my video card. I mean literally I can draw a line separating the games into ones that will be fine and ones that will need an upgrade.
So, I think it's very helpful to help me hold out until the next round of video cards, knowing that I have a specific listing of games I need to play, and just hold off on the others till after the upgrade.
Note: I'm currently playing the very oldest game, X-Com. Damn it I had to buy the whole pack on Steam, so that will keep me very busy. It absolutely flies on my current video card, but the graphics are, ah, not the latest tech!
If this is nonsensical, I should add that for FPS I play 4800x1200 eyefinity, so newer games are a no-go. But I could easily run Bioshock 1 and the Chronicles of Riddick series quite easily. After beating those two, I realized I needed a strategy to decide what order to play games, and I have to say putting them in a spreadsheet to arrange by release date was just really really helpful in a way that I didn't think would happen, kind of a mental relaxation to avoid the guilt of having a backlog of games you bought but worry about never playing, now I'm playing them.
Anyway, sometimes I'd buy a game like Metro 2033 and think OK I need to upgrade my video card and play that.
But in the end, I just made a spreadsheet in Google Docs that has the game and release date, then sorted the list by year.
It was like a revelation to see all the older games I can play, that were released before my video card. I mean literally I can draw a line separating the games into ones that will be fine and ones that will need an upgrade.
So, I think it's very helpful to help me hold out until the next round of video cards, knowing that I have a specific listing of games I need to play, and just hold off on the others till after the upgrade.
Note: I'm currently playing the very oldest game, X-Com. Damn it I had to buy the whole pack on Steam, so that will keep me very busy. It absolutely flies on my current video card, but the graphics are, ah, not the latest tech!

If this is nonsensical, I should add that for FPS I play 4800x1200 eyefinity, so newer games are a no-go. But I could easily run Bioshock 1 and the Chronicles of Riddick series quite easily. After beating those two, I realized I needed a strategy to decide what order to play games, and I have to say putting them in a spreadsheet to arrange by release date was just really really helpful in a way that I didn't think would happen, kind of a mental relaxation to avoid the guilt of having a backlog of games you bought but worry about never playing, now I'm playing them.