Every PC gamer knows the shame: a Steam library bloated with impulse buys, seasonal-sale grabs and free giveaways you swore you’d get to eventually. Dustpile, a free web app announced on July 6, 2026, tackles that guilt pile with a dating-app twist — you swipe through your own games until one finally clicks.
Built by indie developer tolgatr0n, the mind behind Dumbbell Games, Dustpile skips the friction most tools drown in. There’s no account to create and no client to install. You simply paste your Steam profile link, and the site loads your library into a deck of cards ready to browse.
What makes those cards genuinely useful is how much context each one packs. Instead of a bare title and thumbnail, every entry surfaces the information you’d normally have to dig through multiple tabs to find:
- Cover art and genre tags to jog your memory on what the game even is
- Price, so you can see exactly what you paid to ignore it
- Metacritic score and review excerpts for a quick sanity check
- Trailer screenshots to remind you why you clicked buy in the first place
- HowLongToBeat estimates, so you know whether you’re committing to a weekend or a lifestyle
That last detail is the quietly clever part. Knowing a game will eat 80 hours versus eight changes the calculus of what you actually pick tonight, and Dustpile puts that number right where the decision happens rather than making you cross-reference it yourself.
The app doesn’t stop at helping you choose. A dedicated wishlist mode extends the same swipe-and-discover treatment to games you haven’t bought yet, which is either a helpful planning tool or a dangerous one depending on your self-control. And a stats screen delivers the reality check nobody asked for: a running tally of how much money is currently sitting unplayed in your library. If you’ve ever wondered exactly how expensive your habit of buying and forgetting has become, Dustpile is happy to quantify it.
Accessibility is handled well for a hobbyist project — the tool supports 12 languages, so the backlog-clearing gospel isn’t limited to English speakers.
The concept works because it reframes an overwhelming problem as a playful one. A library of 300 untouched titles feels like a chore; a stack of cards to flick through feels like a game in itself. By borrowing the low-stakes, one-at-a-time rhythm of a dating app, Dustpile removes the paralysis of choice that keeps so many of us defaulting to the same handful of comfort games.
It’s free, it runs in your browser, and it’s available now. Whether it actually shrinks your backlog or just makes you more aware of its size, it’s a smart little answer to a problem the entire Steam-owning world quietly shares.