I love the concept, and that it exists, and that my Browser extension Augmented Steam shows me playtimes on Steam store pages,
but man I hate that it always logs me out and then regularly presents me with the worst captchas I've ever seen. Adding times could also be a little bit better UX-wise.
I still make use of it though, submitting game completion times, because it's a good thing to collect and share collectively.
/edit: Looks like I'm not logged out right now, so maybe that improved?
It was linked in the sidebar of the subreddit, so I guess it fits? Also, probably useful for anyone wanting to know how long it takes before starting a game
I used to play through the Baldur's Gate trilogy every few years. Haven't done that in a decade because I look at the three hundred hour playthrough time and know it'll never happen.
Edit: "Trilogy" being what fans called BG1+2 plus the Throne of Bhaal expansion to 2. It's kind of weird now that there's an actual Baldur's Gate 3.
Had a little bit of fun trying to get their search feature to return no results. Games with no actual end like Ardor obviously return nothin, so they're not fun. Realized that just about every single game I could think of has an entry on their website. And that all the games I play aren't obscure enough to be excluded from their record, even if there's no time displayed.
The only thing that I found that wasn't on their search, from my testing of random titles, was a pokemon fangame: Radiant Topaz. Everything else I tried was on there. Even a Spanish fangame called Pokémon Iberia (which I haven't gotten around to because I can't read Spanish) has a result. Even the short Christmas VN spin-off (prequel-esque story?) Christmas story of Brok the Investigator has an entry, and it's only been out since December.
Yeah in theory that's a 50h game, but I can turn any game with a nonlinear plot into a 500h game, give me a side quest I love, a mini game or an open world that's interesting enough and I'll never finish the main quest.
That’s why HLTB splits playtime into play style categories, depending on if you just want to see credits, if you’re gunning for 100%, or something in between.
Me with the Saints row reboot. Ten hours in and I just unlocked vehicle customization because I was just driving around and doing side quests all the time.
Apparently, it takes only 10 hours to beat Dungeon Crawl Stone Soup. . Which seems oddly low, considering just how difficult this game is, and that you have to start over if you die, since it's a roguelike. Though, maybe I just suck. Though, maybe it's for one successful playthrough, which isn't that much of a useful metric when discussing roguelikes.