Here's the thing about having too many games: it's not actually a storage problem. You can fit them all on a hard drive. It's not a money problem — games go on sale constantly and you're not going to stop buying them. It's a decision architecture problem.
You open Steam. You see your library. You scroll. You close Steam. You open Netflix. This happens every single night, even though you have dozens of games that would make you happy if you just played them.
Real talk: The average PC gamer owns 200+ games. The average completion rate across Steam is around 12%. You didn't fail. The tools failed you. No one built something that actually helps you decide.
The Backlog Guilt Cycle
If you have too many Steam games, you've probably noticed this loop:
- You buy a game on sale. It joins the pile.
- You open your library to play something. The pile is overwhelming.
- You close your library and watch something instead.
- You feel vaguely guilty about the pile.
- You buy another game on sale because it was a good deal. The pile grows.
- Repeat.
This isn't laziness. It's not a lack of time. It's that no tool has ever made the decision for you. Every tracker just shows you more of what you're already avoiding.
AI Doesn't Judge Your Pile of Shame
RollCredits was built specifically for people who have accumulated more games than they'll realistically play. The AI isn't trying to get you to finish everything. It's trying to get you to play something tonight and feel good about it.
It works by stripping away the paralysis. Instead of presenting you with a list of 300 games, it asks you two questions:
- How are you feeling? Chill, intense, story-driven, or multiplayer. That's it.
- How much time do you have? 30 minutes, 60 minutes, or more. That's it.
The AI looks at your personal library, your play history, and your patterns, and hands you a single recommendation with a reason. Not a list. Not a suggestion. A decision.
The Old Way vs. The AI Way
Scroll, second-guess, give up
- Browse 300 games
- Check Steam store for new releases
- Open YouTube to "research"
- End up watching instead
- Pile of shame grows
Pick mood, get a game, play
- Pick your mood: chill, intense, etc.
- Pick your available time
- AI picks from YOUR library
- Get a specific game + a reason why
- Play. Credits roll. Repeat.
You Don't Need to Finish Everything
RollCredits doesn't demand you finish your backlog. It just helps you play more and decide less. Some games you'll complete. Some you'll start, love, and put down. Some you'll drop entirely. That's fine. The goal is to reduce the friction between "I want to play a game" and "I'm playing a game."
Over time, if you use it consistently, your backlog shrinks. Not because you're forcing yourself through 80-hour RPGs you don't love, but because you're actually playing the games you already own instead of scrolling for something new.
Your pile of shame isn't a character flaw. It's a tooling gap. RollCredits fills it. Free to start, no credit card needed.