![]() Twitch told me what I watched there in 2020 and I did that Quantic Foundry gamer profile thing again. I also reviewed the games I played in 2020 and attempted to guess what I might play in 2021. I’ve always been told that there are no bad questions, though that statement usually precedes attempts to prove it wrong. Still, $16 keeps me on track to pay the annual hosting for the blog at the Premium service level, which runs $99 a year.įor my new year’s post I chose to ask questions rather than make predictions. Ad quality clearly plays into the revenue side of things, and I didn’t get high quality ads this time around. December’s 99K ads were worth a little over $23, while the 125K ads this past month were worth just about $16. This month the site served up more ads than ever, coming close to 125K ads displayed compared to 99K last month. Pretty good for them, as they still sort of worked while they were broken.Īnd then there was the ad revenue. broke links, waffled about it for a couple of days, then fixed them again. Otherwise is was mostly life as usual for the blog. That is where I stand at the mid-year check-in. It looks to be a couple months away at this point, and we’re not really chomping at the bit for it right now… but give it some time and we might be primed to go back to Northrend. Solasta is something we just picked up this past week, and it has potential.Īnd then there is the coming of Wrath of the Lich King Classic. And Minecraft, which we only started playing in June, looks like it could keep going. That might need a break for another expansion or two before I find it on my list again.ĮVE Online, of course, is going to carry on for now. Lost Ark and New World are unlikely to grow in play time, and EverQuest II, I left that unsatisfied with the last expansion. So what will the back half of the year look like? Valheim is at the top of the list, but unless we get the update for the Mistlands, there isn’t much to do but muck about and build things. Below RimWorld are titles that have not been touched all that much. ![]() Then there is Minecraft, which has gotten a bit of a boost since The Wild update hit. There has been some talk about Amazon fixing some of the issues, but I am not sure there is a lot of desire to return there any time soon. I am not even sure what server I am on now. I think Lost Ark got the advantage just because it takes so long to load.įinally in double digits is EQII where I was playing the Visions of Vetrovia expansion.ĭown in single digits, after some single player stuff was the end of our run at New World. Out of time spent gaming on my PC, this is how my play percentages break out.Īfter Valheim we have Lost Ark and EVE Online pretty much neck in neck for play time. That says something about me or Valheim or both I suppose.Īnyway, Valheim got there by being my most played title so far in 2022 as measured by ManicTime. Now, however, Valheim has taken over the top spot, managing to do so in less than 18 months. I was kind of against Steam back then, but have clearly softened on it as an option over the years. This feature slightly changes how maps with a river generate, and can be disabled in the settings if this is not desired.I think Civilization V has been at the top of the list since I made my current Steam account back in 2010… and I did that because you had to have a Steam account to play. Faster caves and river generation: Significantly speeds up generation of maps that have caves or a river. ![]() It is more accurate and most importantly compatible with other mods that modify or add map features, for example Terra Project Core, CaveBiome and various other biome mods.
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