![]() In fact, your entire cumulative, launcher-spanning library is forever attached to your GOG account, even though you have to reauthorize your third-party credentials on subsequent PCs. I’ve installed Galaxy 2.0 on two different computers, gone through the setup on each, and can confirm star ratings for the Epic Games Store persisted across both. Best of all, they withstand moving from PC to PC. They both serve as a way to quickly find my favorite games and mark which ones I’ve finished. It’s nifty.Īnd I’m fast becoming a fan of Galaxy 2.0’s star ratings as well. ![]() Valve’s tracking these metrics, but even if you use the more detailed (and less functional) list view in Steam you can’t sort by these. For instance, allowing me to sort by achievement percentage-of course!-and by time played. One’s reputedly in the works, sure, but that’s been the case for years now, with no indication when it’ll release.Īlong comes Galaxy 2.0, which does stuff with my Steam library that seems obvious in retrospect, but genius in the moment. Steam is also fairly dated, and could use a full-scale redesign. It also shines a light on some of Steam’s shortcomings, in my opinion. It’s a rich resource in that regard, preserving important info even if you opt to use Galaxy 2.0 as your primary launcher. ![]() ![]() No, Galaxy 2.0 pulls in your history with these games-Steam’s “Hours Played” metric, achievement data, and so on. Games you’ve purchased from other services aren’t treated like second-class citizens, as the aforementioned “Non-Steam Games” are. That’s what impresses me most about Galaxy 2.0 so far. ![]()
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