It's REALLY bad on Steam, but on many online platforms (sadly even itch.io) there is so much damn shovelware. Not even "slop" something below "slop", sludge is the only word I can think of (no disrespect to Sludge Life 1 & 2, great games go play them). It clogs up online storefronts and really ruins searching games by tags.

It's really annoying that my personal favorite genre, "immersive sim" has been utterly flooded with these shovelware games. Unless I know exactly the name of a game, I cannot find anything worthwhile. Good games, small games, gems of yesteryear, all that sort of stuff is just hidden by this layer of sludge. I like to browse storefronts (digital and physical) and just check stuff out, get a feel for what's out there, but you can't do that when there is "XYZ simulator: prologue" every other item.

It fuckin' sucks. I really do think many real good games get lost in the sludge pit and have to hope that some internet video essayist/review or something discovers it by chance. I'm not saying everything is an undiscovered legend but I am saying, I can't even find games on most of these storefronts because the whole thing is flooded with effectively spam games.

(I then feel bad that these scumbags can get a game on steam and i can't even hack together a playable game jam thing, but that's a different post)

  • peppersky [he/him, any]
    ·
    edit-2
    5 days ago

    Human creativity is being crowded out everywhere by these labor-stealing derivative slop machines, and the longer this goes on, the more the slop machines will feed on slop machine content, diluting their own output the way Google's search engine became increasingly useless because of SEO contamination. Copy of a copy syndrome running rampant, all for the low low price of burning our remaining forests and drying up our remaining freshwater supplies.

    It's just the endless downward spiral that is media and art in late-stage capitalism getting steeper and faster as it gets closer to the center (and hopefully although increasingly unlikely its breaking point).