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AI hologram organizing a gamer’s backlog in a sleek futuristic workspace.
TechnologyJuly 3, 2026· 8 min read· By XOOMAR Insights Team

3 ChatGPT Prompts Can Rescue Your Gaming Backlog Fast

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Updated on July 3, 2026

A chatbot sounds like a terrible way to fix a gaming backlog, but three ChatGPT gaming backlog prompts can turn a guilt pile into a playable summer list.

XOOMAR Intelligence

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That’s the useful lesson from a Tom’s Guide experiment where the writer used ChatGPT to rank a 10-game backlog, pick games by mood, and build weekend play sessions, according to Tom’s Guide. The writer had already completed 17 games in 2025, yet still hit the midpoint of 2026 with unfinished games hanging around.

The surprise isn’t that ChatGPT can recommend games. The useful part is narrower: it can force a decision when your backlog has become emotional clutter.

Before:

  • Old habit: Stare at the backlog, feel guilty, reopen a comfort game.
  • New habit: Ask ChatGPT to rank, match, or schedule from a fixed list.
  • Old outcome: Another night disappears into default multiplayer.
  • New outcome: You know what to play, why it fits, and when to stop thinking.

Turn your gaming backlog into a playable summer shortlist

The goal is not to let ChatGPT become your taste-maker. It doesn’t know your taste better than you do. It can, however, sort the mess you’ve already created.

In the Tom’s Guide case, the writer kept drifting back to Tekken 8's ranked mode instead of spending time with unbeaten games. That’s the backlog trap in one sentence: the game you know wins because the game you bought asks for effort.

Use ChatGPT as a sorting layer. Give it your list. Ask it to rank what matters. Then push back when the answer feels wrong.

The three prompts below do three different jobs:

  1. Rank the backlog by likely regret.
  2. Pick tonight’s game based on mood, energy, and time.
  3. Plan a weekend without turning gaming into work.

Before you ask ChatGPT, put the full backlog in one place

Start with a simple list. Don’t overbuild it.

The Tom’s Guide writer gave ChatGPT this 10-game backlog:

  • Metaphor: ReFantazio
  • Clair Obscur: Expedition 33
  • Dying Light: The Beast
  • Grandia HD Collection
  • 007 First Light
  • Saros
  • God of War Sons of Sparta
  • Mouse: P.I. For Hire
  • Absolum
  • Luna Abyss

That was enough for ChatGPT to make a first pass. The list included older and newer games, plus several RPGs that clearly needed more time and attention.

Your version should be just as plain. Write the games down in one note. If you already know which ones are long, started, half-forgotten, or still exciting, add that in a few words. Imperfect data is fine. You’re not building a database. You’re giving ChatGPT enough context to stop treating every game as equally urgent.

Watch out for: dumping in a giant list and asking, “What should I play?” That invites a vague answer. Smaller, sharper prompts work better.

For readers thinking about how much personal preference data they put into any AI assistant, XOOMAR has also covered the broader privacy angle in Proton Lumo 2.0 Locks Your Prompts Away From AI Training and the safety debate around chatbots in Meta Chatbot Testing Dragged Teen Safety Into the Dark.


Use Prompt 1 to rank your backlog by regret, not hype

The first prompt from the Tom’s Guide experiment is the strongest because it asks for prioritization under a constraint.

“If I could only finish 10 more games over this year, which ones from my backlog would I regret missing the most? Rank them and explain why they're essential experiences.”

That wording matters. It doesn’t ask for “best games.” It asks which games the player would regret missing. That shifts the answer from generic ranking to personal triage.

ChatGPT put Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 at No. 1. The chatbot’s reasoning, as quoted in the source, was direct:

Why it's #1: This is the game I'd be least willing to skip. It has already earned a reputation as one of the standout RPGs of the decade thanks to its emotional storytelling, inventive turn-based combat, gorgeous art direction, and unforgettable soundtrack.

It also warned why skipping it could sting:

Why you’ll regret missing it: It’s one of those rare RPGs everyone references, it has a story that's best experienced without spoilers and it could easily become a modern classic alongside games like NieR: Automata & Persona 5.

Treat that as a starting point, not a verdict. ChatGPT’s ranking may overweight reputation or genre fit. If it pushes a game too high because it sounds acclaimed, say so.

Use a follow-up like this:

“Revise the ranking. I’m less interested in reputation and more interested in games I’ll actually finish this summer. Keep the explanations short.”

In the source, the final summer order after Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 was Metaphor: ReFantazio, Saros, 007 First Light, Dying Light: The Beast, Grandia HD Collection, Absolum, Mouse P.I. For Hire, God of War Sons of Sparta, and Luna Abyss.

XOOMAR analysis: the key move is not the exact order. It’s forcing the backlog to compete for limited attention.

Use Prompt 2 to stop picking the wrong game for the wrong night

The second prompt fixes a more ordinary problem: your mood doesn’t always match the game you think you “should” play.

Tom’s Guide used this:

The "Mood-Based Recommendation" Prompt: Recommend a game from my backlog based on my current mood. I'll describe how I'm feeling, my energy level, how much time I have, and whether I want something relaxing, exciting, emotional, or challenging.

This is where ChatGPT gaming backlog prompts become practical instead of theoretical. A long RPG may be the right summer project, but not after a draining day when you only have a narrow window to play. A mood prompt lets the list bend without collapsing into random choice.

Use it like this:

  1. Say your mood: tired, focused, stressed, curious, competitive.
  2. Say your energy level: low, medium, high.
  3. Say your time available: be honest.
  4. Say the kind of session you want: relaxing, exciting, emotional, challenging.

Then ask for one pick and a backup.

Watch out for: letting ChatGPT talk you into the “important” game every night. If you want low-pressure play, say that clearly. The model responds better when the constraint is explicit.

Use Prompt 3 to build a weekend plan that won’t burn you out

The third source prompt is not a two-week productivity system. It’s a weekend planner, which is exactly why it works.

The "Weekend Planner" Prompt: I have this weekend to play games. Here's my backlog. Create the most satisfying gaming weekend possible by balancing story progression, gameplay variety, and avoiding burnout.

That last phrase is doing real work: avoiding burnout.

A backlog plan fails when it becomes a second job. The weekend prompt gives ChatGPT permission to mix pace, tone, and intensity. That matters if your list contains RPGs, action games, and shorter experiments.

A tighter version you can paste:

“I have this weekend to play games. Here is my backlog: [paste list]. Create a plan that balances story progress, variety, and avoiding burnout. Give me one clear goal for each session.”

Keep the session goals small. “Make story progress” is mushy. “Finish one chapter,” “try the opening hour,” or “decide whether to continue” is cleaner.

Watch out for: asking for a plan so packed that it kills the point of playing. If the schedule feels like work, ask ChatGPT to cut it in half.

Use ChatGPT’s list, then overrule it like an adult

The best version of this system has friction. ChatGPT ranks. You disagree. ChatGPT revises. You play.

That loop is the value.

In the Tom’s Guide example, ChatGPT gave the writer reasons to return to several backlog games across July and August. It also helped preserve room for mood and weekend availability. That’s a better outcome than staring at a library and defaulting to the same comfort game again.

Here’s the practical hierarchy:

Prompt Best use Bad use
Regret ranking Choosing what deserves attention first Treating ChatGPT’s order as objective truth
Mood recommendation Picking tonight’s game fast Avoiding games you actually want to finish
Weekend planner Creating balanced sessions Turning leisure into homework

XOOMAR analysis: the win is decision compression. The backlog stops being one giant unresolved choice and becomes three smaller choices: priority, mood fit, and schedule fit.

Quick recap: paste these ChatGPT gaming backlog prompts before your next session

Use these ChatGPT gaming backlog prompts in order.

  1. Rank the backlog: ask which games you’d regret missing most.
  2. Match your mood: tell ChatGPT your energy, time, and desired experience.
  3. Plan the weekend: balance story progress, variety, and burnout risk.

The attitude shift is simple: your backlog is a menu, not a debt.

Next action: paste 10 games into ChatGPT today and ask for a ranked summer list before your next gaming session. Then play the first game long enough to know whether the ranking was right.

Key Takeaways

  • ChatGPT can help reduce decision fatigue by turning a messy backlog into clear next steps.
  • The approach keeps the player in control while using AI as a sorting and scheduling tool.
  • It offers a practical way to stop defaulting to comfort games and start finishing what you already own.

Three ChatGPT Prompts for Tackling a Gaming Backlog

PromptWhat It Does
Rank the backlogSorts unfinished games by likely regret to create a playable shortlist.
Pick tonight’s gameMatches a game to your current mood, energy, and available time.
Plan a weekendBuilds play sessions without turning gaming into work.

Backlog Experiment by the Numbers

ChatGPT prompts
count3
Games in backlog
count10
Games completed in 2025
count17
XOOMAR

Written by

XOOMAR Insights Team

Research and Editorial Desk

The XOOMAR Insights Team pairs automated research with human editorial judgment. We track hundreds of sources across technology, fintech, trading, SaaS, and cybersecurity, cross-check the facts, and explain what happened, why it matters, and what to watch next. We do not just rewrite headlines. Every article is fact-checked and scored for reliability before it goes live, and we link back to the original sources so you can verify anything yourself.

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