I still felt like playing a Shooter because of all of the BF6 discussions, but I didn't want to get the Sniper Elite bundle, so I just downloaded BF2 instead and played against bots for a bit. It took a few minutes before I got the hang of it again, but I after that I felt right at home.
I'm probably just extending the Windows 10 support because I don't want to spend the time upgrading to 11 or switching to Linux right now. I don't have anything against 11, it's on my work laptop now and it was installed on the second-hand PC we bought, so I'll probably switch eventually, but only when I really need to.
Release date is a pretty poor indicator for minimum system requirements though unless you exclusively look at AAA titles. But if you really want to you could use Steamdb instead, they do allow filtering on release date.
To all the Windows 10 users out there, let's be honest here: when October comes around, what are we doing? Are we switching to Windows 11, switching to Linux, or extending Windows 10 support for a year free?
I'm probably just extending the Windows 10 support because I don't want to spend the time upgrading to 11 or switching to Linux right now. I don't have anything against 11, it's on my work laptop now and it was installed on the second-hand PC we bought, so I'll probably switch eventually, but only when I really need to.
It would be nice if Steam could add a release date range slider to their search. My wife's laptop is pretty underpowered but it can play non-demanding games just fine, like Minecraft and Roblox. I feel like if Steam just added a release date slider, I could find games we can play together that will run perfectly fine on her laptop. I can always look this stuff online but it would also be nice if Steam could do it for us![]()
Release date is a pretty poor indicator for minimum system requirements though unless you exclusively look at AAA titles. But if you really want to you could use Steamdb instead, they do allow filtering on release date.
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