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Day 467 of requesting feature to exclude *multiple* tags Sticky Locked

A topic by JustZ created Oct 10, 2022 Views: 9,074 Replies: 121
This topic was locked by No Time To Play Jan 04, 2024

Discussion devolved into insults.

Viewing posts 1 to 38
(2 edits) (+87)

Lets be real most of us are sick of all these horror games flooding the place, I mean look at it, click on browse, click on games, and boom, a whole page of horror games... and when it's not horror it's visual novel...

Edit: all we asked for was to exclude multiple tags, and they decided removing downvotes to comments and replies is a good idea

Moderator(+4)

Yes, in the first three pages or so. Please add some filters. Pick the kinds of games you want to see. That's how itch.io is designed to work. Or simply skip the first few pages of results, that works too, I just tried it.

(+66)

Please don't try to brush off this problem.  Yes, it's tiring to see the same post over and over again, and yes, I know that you personally can't do anything about it, but trying to shut down the conversation or offer unhelpful "solutions" isn't helping anyone.

If anything, I think this should be a sticky topic.  It's obviously of great concern to a sizable portion of the community, and making a sticky topic removes the need to create a new topic for this every few weeks.

Moderator(+4)

Done! But absent the solution people want, or at least a more official answer, it's frustrating to see everyone refusing to do the one thing they can try right now to improve their experience a little, even if it's not good enough.

(1 edit) (+24)

yes. I do realize that you can filter out one (and only one) specific tag by adding something after the url. no. one exclusion isn't enough, it's only gonna turn the horror games flooded page into a visual novel flooded page.

and yes. I do realize that I can just skip a few pages to actually get something that's neither of them. no. it's not consistant nor efficient as I'll have to do it everytime I look for games, and there's still a lot of horror and/or visual novel after the third page.

Moderator (1 edit) (+2)

No, I mean filtering in the other direction: pointing out what games you want to see, not what you want to exclude. That's how itch.io is designed to work. Try browsing by specific tags, or tag combinations. Yes, yes, I get it. You want to see "mostly everything except for these specific genres". But again, that's not how itch.io is designed, and until this problem can be solved, using the site the way it's made to be used would help, even if it's not exactly what you want.

(+23)

sure that might work if you could do OR/Boolean filters in tags. (fantasy OR fps OR puzzle NOT (VN or anime or adult). But since you cant, if you like multiple genres and want to just remove a few from your search results, this is meaningless. 

(+3)

makes me wonder which framework this page is run on, maybe the internet can help getting an actual search function?

(+10)

You said "filter needs to pint out what games you want to see, not what you want to exclude". But you forgot the crucial thing - games has several tags, not only one. Imagine I want to find Puzzle game without Anime tag - why I can't do such simple thing?.Is it to difficult to implement, really? That's a shame for such popular website.

(+3)

That one actually is an easy thing.  In that other thread it sounded, as if it was coded in an hour. But  if there is an easy method of exluding one tag, I did not stumble upon it yet.

https://itch.io/games/genre-puzzle?exclude=tg.anime
(+1)

I saw this method before, but it didn't work yesterday. But now it works like a clock! imo, this is an ugly workaround for such famous website

(+1)

Maybe you had a typo. And for that specific exclusion, there were only like 2 games  filtered out on the first page.

It is not a workaround. It was specifically coded to do what it does. Scroll down a bit, there is the link to the 5yo thread.  

Maybe that feature is not requestet that much to warrent coding the version with multiple tags and search integration. Or even integration of that quick unadvertised addition to browse.  I did not even know, that Steam could do such a thing.  And I bet most people do not even know they can use negative search terms in search engines  with a  - sign. Because that is, what tag exclusion is: negated search terms.

(2 edits) (+7)

I mean it's a workaround bc there is no UI to turn this on.

I personally use excluding filters all the time, in Steam and many other programs. It's a big QoL feature for better searching.

Moreover, on this website, it's a BIG NEED feature - just open the popular games tab, it flooded completely with horror games. Sometimes I don't want to play a certain genre, BUT I always know what I certainly do not want to play. It's where this feature comes in handy.

(+1)

This doesn't work. Let's say I want to play an RPG. If I try to filter for RPGs, all I find are horror "RPGs" and visual novel "RPGs". Without the ability to filter out tags, it's impossible to find the kinds of games I want, because all these creators tag their horror and visual novel games with every other tag as well.

Moderator

You can drill down by adding more tags to the first. You can also click through to the third page of results or so. Horror games only crowd the first couple of pages.

(2 edits) (+19)

The truth is they are super liberal and they don't want people filtering out their 19 different forms of gay tags. They won't say it, but it's true.

Meanwhile can we get a SINGLE "Straight" tag added? I'd be happy with that is I can't exclude the rest.

(+14)

name all 19, go

Moderator (2 edits) (+8)

Straight is the default, for 99% of the games on itch.io, and that's a super liberal site, as you pointed out. The ratio is much worse anywhere else. You shouldn't have any trouble finding those games you want among the literally one in a hundred that you dislike.

(1 edit) (+13)

That... is literally the problem? Straight is the default, so it is not included within the tags, so you can not search for it to use it for filtering stuff. Which might be fine if you could exclude the various gay tags (19 might be an exaggeration, but I can think of four common ones: Gay, LGBT, Bara, Lesbian). But we can't, so we're trying to come up with a new workaround that does work within itch.io's ridiculous framework. And you're objecting to even that???

Oh, and just so we're clear: there's nothing wrong with all the LGBT stuff, I am glad that it exists and that this can be a platform to host it, so that gay players have stuff to enjoy as well. I just don't want to see it myself. And guess what: they don't want to force it down our throats either; during one of the ten thousand or so previous times this topic was brought up, the author of one of the many gay furry visual novels came in and made it clear that they are just as annoyed by the lack of tag exclusion as straight people are.

(+6)

Straight people don't need a tag because it's so easy to find straight content

(1 edit) (+18)

On a platform with a sane and reasonable search feature, sure, maybe. But that's not what we're dealing with; we're dealing with a platform where you can only filter content by adding more tags.

On itch.io specifically, it seems pretty easy to find both, just sorta mixed in with each other randomly, especially among the highest rated stuff. But the problem isn't even really, ease of finding what we're looking for. It's a matter of, excluding what we are explicitly not looking for. Let's take a look at the current top two rows of highest rated free nsfw web games, and what we can guess from their title cards:

1. Max the Elf: Looks straight at first glance? Then at second glance, nope, you can see screenshots of the male player character on the receiving end of cocks. Did not want to see that, did anyway. LGBT is right there in the tags, coulda avoided that with tag exclusion.
2. Sileo: Tales of a New Dawn: Looks gay, explicitly states that it is. Okay, cool, that was straightforward! Not gonna click it.
3. Five Nights at FuzzBoob's: Looks straight, judging by how the title card is literally just a pair of breasts. Haven't played it myself though so I can't be sure. After a brief look at the description though, I see the phrase "her two girlfriends", so... lesbian, then? Not seeing any tags to indicate this, though!
4. Superstition S1: From the title card, I can't even guess. I was even on the verge of suspecting it was one of those things that gets called "nsfw" for reasons like, horror or trigger warnings or some such thing? In the description though, I saw "Play as male, female, or non-gender specific, along with transgender choices. Romance one of five characters, have flings, or stay single because life is hectic enough as is.", so... optionally LGBT, optionally straight? No way of guessing that without checking first, though.
5. Factorial Omega: My Dystopian Robot Girlfriend: Looks straight... and actually is!
6. After Years: Appears to be another obviously gay one.
7. Bad Ritual: Another where I can't even guess. Upon closer examination, LGBT and LGBTQIA are in fact in the tags (hey, there's a 5th gay tag!). No indication in the description whether it is gay, lesbian, transgender, or something else, but from a brief look at the comments it seems probably gay... unless it's actually bi and everyone is just focusing on the male characters.
8. The Forest of Love: Can not even guess from the title card. Or from the description. There is no LGBT tag in here. And yet, it seems that there is stuff with both male and female characters? So, this one is apparently bi, but just, poorly indicated in general?
9. Crown of Exile: No indication from title card. This one appears to have the ability to play as male or female, and romance male or female characters. No idea whether your own character's gender limits your options or not, though; there is no LGBT tag, but we already know that isn't completely reliable.
10. Some Sword/Some Play: Another with no indication from title card. Sifting through the description though, I see: "All three main romances are playable as any combination of M/F/NB with any configuration of naughty bits.". So, another that could be straight, gay, lesbian, or anything else depending on what the player chooses. No tags to indicate this.
11. He Fucked the Girl Out of Me: Can't guess from the image, but from the name, I would guess some sort of transgender thing? In the tags, I see: "Gay, Lesbian, LGBT, Queer, Transgender, Yuri". Wow that's a lot... okay we've gone from 5 all the way up to 8 gay tags thanks to this one. But: the description also states "Trigger Warnings are listed in-game.", and from the comments I am not even sure if this one is porn at all, but rather a deeper story which just happens to focus on nsfw subject matter?
12. Nicole's Risky Job: Would guess straight. Seems to actually be solo female though, no males involved, which means... would probably be equally fine for a lesbian as for a straight man. And would not be fine for a straight woman.

So, out of just these 12, that's quite a few incorrect guesses and stuff that is just poorly indicated without playing. Seriously, this is even worse than I thought, only like a third can be correctly guessed ahead of time without clicking on them. At this point, additional tags, even without the actual tag exclusion we all want, would be helpful for filtering for everyone.

(+11)

How dare you bring an argument with logic and  statistic in a   discussion about lgbt!

But yeah, interesting   idea. How many   of the top listers   are tagged in a way that you can find them easily. Or rather, distinguish them from stuff that would not interest you.

Though optional   content or possibilities are an interesting subject.   There are games where the mc and interactions are   freely choseable. This is more like a life simulator. Does this even qualify as "gay",    just because you could play it that way.   Even play it exclusivly that way.    Would you search for something like that with a gay or with a straight tag? Well, I would not tag it gay, as it's focus is not. It's focus would be simulation and lewdness and customizablity. But this is my opinion,  since there are no user tags, we are at the mercy of the dev, what tags are given.

As long as we do not have user suggested tags, tag filtering is rather moot anyways. You  need to rely on tagging by the dev. And let's face it. They will have a different opinion about the tags of their game, than the players. I liked that example about the different lgbt tags. Will you find yuri, if you search for lesbian, but the dev did not tag  gratiously?  Is yuri even lesbian or is it specifically  lesbian in a  romantic way that may or may not be sexual and should have anime style graphics.... ;-)

(+2)

I never said logic cant be used in the conversation. You're literally assuming that I'm against logical arguments because I'm queer. Anyways, all I said was lgbtq+ content isn't that difficult to avoid. Just look at games more carefully dude

(+6)

You do realize, that you do prove my point, that I made as a joke? Your two responses show that    you take it emotionally, instead of responding to the   points raised. You try to shift it from complaining about the available content filter options to   people hating on  specific content. We just do not want to waste our time sifting through the description of a game to find out, that it would not interest us after all. 

The discussion at that point was about being able to identify   the content that interests you or rather, that does not interest you. Within the scope of what is currently doable on the platform. Like tags and  short descriptions including screenshots, like the stuff that pops up when you mouse over a game. xlksk tried to  do that to a random slice of games selected by their popularity   and  results were not really  satisfying.

And what you assume is, that I do not play lgbt games, my dear furry looking friend ;-)  

So what does a tag really say?   Imho, not really much, and I do not really use them much to find games, because of how unreliable the tagging is.

I do not like kinetic novels for example, the tagging for that is ... lacking. Similar problems, I have to read very carefully to distinguish some "visual novels" from kinetic novels. Some devs do tag that, some do not.

If your main focus of the game is actually content aimed at people that like gay/trans/furry/ntr whatever content, you do not hide that. You want to be recognised by your target audience. If your "existing " gayness in a game is the focus of the game, it should be obvious from a short description, but if it really only exists, it should not even be tagged.

(+2)

Uhm, to clarify, I did not assume anything about you.    But I do know from observation and experience    that discussions about this topic are usually emotionally driven and far from sound arguments. So I found it refreshing to see a factual post and made a   remark about how unusual that is.

(1 edit) (+4)

I see your point but nothing can "look" straight or gay without relying on heavy stereotypes and it is not our responsibility to warn you for gay people EXISTING in a game. NSFW should be warned for accordingly but I don't feel we should have to make everything stereotypically gay just so you don't have to deal with seeing two lesbians since that upsets you so much. But anyways I understand not wanting 2 see nsfw but seeing a gay game you thought might be straight bc its not a walking stereotype really isn't that big of a deal and if that upsets you you are the problem

(+6)

From some of your other posts on here I am thinking you are probably just a troll, but I'll respond anyway for the sake of anyone else reading this in the future. To the overall points anyway; don't care enough to bother with the ad-hominem junk, this ain't about me.

When it comes to nsfw games, as in porn games, generally they're going to put a picture of a girl up front if it's for people attracted to girls, and a picture of a guy up front if it's for people attracted to guys. If they put multiple characters on, then you can sometimes narrow things down further depending on how they are posed; they could be together, or they could be different options. Also, justified or not, the target audience of any sort of porn tends to be men, even if the actual audience is much more varied. The end result is: if you see a male character  on a porn game's title card (and especially if you see two or more male characters together), it's probably gonna be gay, and if you see a female character and in many cases even if you see multiple female characters, it's probably straight, though lesbian is still a possibility, especially on this site. Yes I know the latter half is half of what you are objecting to, please don't hyperfixate on just that.

If we were talking about actually safe for work games, that's a different story. Nothing wrong with lgbt characters showing up, or being in romantic relationships on screen, I fully support that. Plenty of awesome characters out there who happen to be romantically/physically attracted to their own gender as just one of their many character traits. Being openly out there and having representation is outright vital, not just for public support to acknowledge and accept it as normal, but so gay people don't have to deal with random police raids and shit like in the bad old pre-Stonewall-riot days. But we aren't talking about safe for work games, we are currently talking about porn.

In the sort of games being discussed here, the characters are doing a whole lot more than just EXISTING. Doing a lot more than even just kissing each other, too. They are having sex with each other, explicitly, on screen. Often, that is like 90% of the game's content; just the characters having sex. Nothing wrong with that, but depending on the genitals of the characters, not everyone is going to want to see it. In circumstances like these, male-on-male, female-on-female, and yes female-on-male as well, are all basically just fetishes, no different from stuff like bdsm or ntr or vore or poop or whatever. Some people will be into it, a lot of others will be outright grossed out by the sight of it. It is the responsibility of porn makers to properly tag the fetishes within the porn that they are making. And, more relevantly to this overall thread: it is the responsibility of the hosting site to make it so people can actually properly filter using those tags, and itch.io is failing in that responsibility.

(4 edits) (+7)

Im not a troll, Im just a queer person who thinks it really isnt that big of a deal to see queer people in games but whatever. or straight people for that matter. Also while I understand that a sexuality isnt a fetish and shouldnt be fetishized???

My main issue is ppl getting upset over sfw lgbtq+ content, guess i didnt realize nsfw was the main focus. Thats a different conversation entirely. I responded the way I did bc the BEGINNING of the thread was VERY homophobic, "The truth is they are super liberal and they don't want people filtering out their 19 different forms of gay tags. They won't say it, but it's true."

(+4)

Straight is and always has been the default for society. The reason LGBTQ+ people have our own tags is that representation is limited so we have to search for it explicitly. Also, most liberals are actually rightwing and not very supportive of gay rights please get your terms straight before whining online about how you're forced to see gay people

(+5)

This is about tagging. Since exclusion of tags does not seem to come along anytime soon, a positive tag   might be a solution for some cases.

Or do tell, if you have game that is tagged "gay", do you expect to see much straight content in it? Tags should tell the user the focus of the content.

But yeah,   since in the adult erotica context   "straight" is pretty much the base,   tagging it straight does not give much information, so nobody would bother tagging it that way, as "adult" alone pretty much does it . At least not the developer. User given tags might go the extra mile to tag like this.

Also, this would not be the solution for horror filtering. Being non-horror is the trait of ... well, every non-horror game.   So tagging non-horror would not happen. But you could tag non-lgbt as straight.

(+1)

I guess, but its still not really necessary

(+16)

so, if i don't wanna see horror & creep, i need to select all other tags?

(1 edit) (+34)

No that just gives you nothing.

I love how a site that hosts hundreds of thousands of games can't even make a simple functional filter. The average porn site these days has better filtering options.

(+19)

basically a yes from the mods as seen from the replies above, never tried that before, might see if it works

still can't understand why they say "that's how it's supposed to work" when 8/10 of us want this feature tbh

Moderator(+8)

Sorry. I meant to say that's how the site was built. That people want it to work differently is another story.

(+5)

ah, now that makes a lot more sense, understandable

(+3)

Just noticing that if you click on New & PopularTop Rated, or Most Recent there are significantly fewer horror titles popping up. Top Sellers has a fair amount of horror but its about 50/50 at most. So really it's just one out of the five main "filters" that is majority horror. 

(+3)

damn I didn't try those cuz I thought it'd be even more flooded with those tbh

(+24)

I absolutely cannot browse this site properly, please add this feature already it is all we want, i really miss when this website wasnt filled to the brim with bad quality horror games and visual novels. 

(+27)

Negative filtering is good. Not having it looks pretty incompetent. 5 years lol. 

(+21)

I've been annoyed by the flood of Visual Novels and after months I've reached the point of wanting to rant.
As a good hearted internet person, I'd do the sensible thing and first search for it: "tag exclude" "tag exclusion search"... I've found ONE post, refering to another, refering to this 5 year old reply: https://itch.io/t/160014/can-i-use-exclusion-filters well that won't be enough. Another search for "search" and manually overlooking 20 posts... yeah no, nothing relating to my intend that I could add to. Obviously, I have to make my own post. Then I look for the right place to drop my rant instead of "General" and find this neat sticky thread. Yes, sticking it to top has just now prevented at least one additional rant thread. Reading through, I wanna say: If you mods feel bothered by the apparently weekly rants asking for that function, then tell me why was it so hard to find this? Why after 5 years we still need URL-editing to exclude one single tag instead of having a neat little button? Why feel you offended if anyone asks for multiple filters? You have a big fat library of great games so  EVERYONE can find SOMETHING . But NOTHING itself is right for EVERYONE. Some people like this, some people like that, and since you have a (great, I may add) sortiment of tag "adult" games, the obsession with thinning down to the good stuff is a very personal matter.

It's not about "Visual Novels are bad" or "Horror Games are gross" or "Too much letters in the rainbow, where is the straight stuff". It's about "today I want to find this one specific thing that I can't find when the results are flooded with this other general thing". It can be something easy like "Roguelike but no shooters please" or something complicated like "Action but no platformer, Rich Story but no Visual Novel, Laidback but no Sandbox"... Of course the function stands and falls with how the creators tag their works. But hey, anyone ever been to any booru site knows that stuff.

And please do make a button so the next one does not have to search for a 5 year old devpost to learn how to URL-edit for single tag exclusion.

Moderator(+4)

You only had to look around a little to find this topic. Also, you're mixing up mods and devs. Mods don't write code for the site and we don't know why this feature still hasn't been implemented after all this time. But it's been discussed many, many times in the forum. That's what a forum is good for: old discussions stick around and you can search for them. Yet all too often people prefer to ask again.

(+14)

That's exactly my point. I did use the tools meant to avoid throwing new threads over old topics - but they failed me.
Only manually looking lead me to this exact thread here, which I then chose to add my 50 cents to. So people can see this topic is still important, without me opening something new over something old.

I've choosen the word "mods" because this thread apparently opens with the discussion that the mods rather frown over the frequent complains and attempt to shut them down, and another user (I guess) suggested that sticking this thread could help - which in my case, it did. 

But yes, actually solving the problem apparently every week someone asks for - someone unaware of the dozens of times that exact question has been asked before - would be task for the devs, not the mods. My bad.

(+13)

Please add this feature

(+22)

Or just an ignore feature in general. And pretty sure people have been asking for multiple tag exclusions for at least 5 years. 

(+16)

I came to the forum thinking "Surely there must be a search filter, that's a basic function that any platform like this would have, I must just be missing it" and then I see this thread. 

So I throw my vote for having a filter option that isn't just the admin tossing in a quick scotch tape solution. I think a lot of people try to find this feature, fail decide discovery is too much of a pain here, and give up.

(+11)

My 2 cents as a long time internet user. The   Browse feature currently lists 700k games. Some kind of sorting assistance is needed. It is just too much to find stuff. It is different from, let's say an adult video site *chough, cough*, where you engage in content for a few minutes.  There, the thumbnails and previews are actually basically the content.

Here, a screenshot or even tags say practically nothing about a game.   Well, ok, if you see boobies, it is Adult content, and if you see creepy stuff, it probably is horror, but even if the dev claims it is a Visual Novel, it could actually be a ressource management game made in a vn engine. Or a  kinetic novel, what is only technically a VN.

Older games are not even tagged properly or at all.  Not that the tagging of newer releases is accurate a lot.

While exlude feature would be nice, it is not practical. I saw this once on an adult site, but they had like a dozen tags and no more. You could then activate with a checkbox what you wanted (or not). itch has a 14 page listing of available tags...

Also, ... if Steam has an exlcude feature, I did not find it yet. While of course itch is not Steam, and a lot of stuff should not be copied, just because the big fish does or does not do it, it just shows there might be reasons for such a feature to not be implemented.

I think the reason is accuracy of tags. You would need a well defined   and exhaustive list of tags, and that list cannot be too lare for intuitive usage, like say 20, better 10 items. But with hundreds of ill defined/applied tags ...   exluding by tag is not gonna help you much, so why bother.

For the exclusion of sexual preferences, a straight-only tag would be the way to go. Positive searches are better than negative filters.

Regardless, for all this, the games need to have searchable attributes in the first place. And to copy from Steam and the Big Adult sites, there do be the concept of    user suggested tags. As in, the users tag the content. While it might not be accurate everytime, it sure beats dev only tags that are incomplete,    misleading     (intentional or not)   or right out missing from the start.  

I am relativly new to itch, and what I missed so far the most were    public reviews. I can imagine any number of good reasons to not have them, but user tagging would certainly be nice.   In the More Information page those could be separated from the other tags, so that users know that they are from other users. And since people love nothing more than to correct others on the internet, if the tags would not match the game, the nitpickers would love to take action.

(+6)

just wanted to note:
steam does have the option to blacklist stuff, it's just buried in the settings, so it's less of a "today i don't want this" and more like a "i don't want to see horror stuff at all"

(+4)

I  stand corrected.

Steam does indeed has tag exclusion.   When you browse the catalog, and you narrow by tags, each tag has a - sign right to it and a check box left to it. If you tick the checkbox or click the tag, the game has to have that tag and if you click the - , the games with that tag are excluded.

I did not even know that was possible.    But it has the same design flaw that would apply here. The tags have to be correct for that.    And the steam catalogue only has like 140k items. So they have more resources, and less items. I am surprised we even have ability to excluce one tag here, even if that method is not  known to everyone.

(What you meant is the mature content filtering.  Itch has that too, but only adult, yes or no.)

(+16)

is there a reason we don't have this? this is really frustrating

(+6)

could I just ask:

I understand you are just a mod, but can't you bring this up to the devs?

Moderator(+3)

Itch.io admins have been aware of this feature request for a long time.

(+10)

did they state why they arent implement this?

Moderator(+4)

No.

(+14)

In addition, I think it would be great to have the ability to blacklist individual developers/authors and games, because there's some games and authors in certain categories I'd love to not see.

(+1)

I think there's already a block button. Have you tried blocking them?

(+2)

Yes, and that does nothing. It still appears while browsing or even in recommendations.

(+11)

I hope filtering out tags get implemented soon, I really don't like seeing horror from top to bottom the second I open the browse page

(+7)

Try adding this to a browse url. It's not the most convenient method, but it was easy to implement according to another thread. This thread has "multiple" in it for a reason.

?exclude=tg.horror
(+2)

I found that other thread on my way to this one but thank you!

(+2)

I even put emphasis on *multiple* tho lmao

(+2)

I even wondered about that , and still did not get it immediatly. Maybe because the exlude feature for one tag is not really advertised. So I never came across the question, how to do multiple exclusions, since I did not even know, how to do a singular one.

(+8)

At this point I have doubts it will ever be implemented, the ability to exclude or outright BLACKLIST tags.

(+11)

https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/464588-e-itch-io-exclude-tag

There's nothing  wrong with the tag 'horror', until game dev newbie smartass decided to take pride to tag their mediocre, half baked free asset mash-up 'horror'. IMHO the correct tag'd be 'amature' or plain 'horrible'. 

The same happened on 'survival', it used to mean carefully craved game mechanic like in Resident Evil instead of pointless open ended craft-whatever-you-like.

(+3)

You have named the deeper problem precisly. Tags are inaccurate. For tag filtering you need precise tags in the first place. So my theory why this is not implemented yet, is, that it would be not very helpful, because the tags you could filter, are not helpful in the first place. Little gain for much work. Low priority.

That userscript fetches  the tags and blurs the  list while doing so, I assume. The comment about  ddos implies that it fetches all of them in short succcession. So basically all the displayed items will get their tags fetched and get hidden accordingly.

Will this trigger the interaction for scoring the recommendations? Because, it would trigger all the stuff that is on top of the lists, like all those horrible games people complain about . That would tell    itch you like to interact with them and recommend them to you in the future, if it will get triggered.

(+6)

> Will this trigger the interaction for scoring the recommendations? 

As with all questions concerning itch.io web UI and its reasoning, I believe the answer remains unknown to most of us here ;p

As of today, 35 out of 36 on the first page of /games are tagged 'horror' (hidden by userscript this screenshot) 

Come on, am I on WITCH.IO ?

WITCH.IO   nice

While one can argue for a  policy of positive searching on a defacto non commercial platform, this exposes the flaw of tagging, or the algorithm that thinks this is popular - or , shockingly, the taste of many itch users.

Yeah,  itch is not a non commercial platform, but the abundance of stuff is donation-ware and most so called indie devs are not even indie, but hobby.  They are amateurs. Real indie devs are professionals, but they just do not work for a big gaming studio. It is like calling a blogger a freelance journalist or a youtuber an   indie movie studio.

And I think it is not a policy thing, but does just not fit in the existing structure. That structure would include accurate tags. 

I for one do not use that feature at all. I do search "positive". Mostly with similar games, recommendations (that is why I asked if it would trigger that), and global feed.

thank you for the script! It's currently very slow (roughly 1-2 seconds per Game), is that the highest speed permitted by itch.io?

(1 edit)

It's not working for me in Firefox with Greasemonkey. Seems to work in Chrome with Tamper Monkey, but it's hella slow.

Switched to Tamper Monkey in FF and it works. Guess Greasemonkey doesn't like the script.

(2 edits) (+1)

@de_g0od @Darxide23 Thanks for your review.

 That speed's my take on a reasonable speed for openresty servers, coz as much as we're annoyed by the site UI, we love to see itch.io and the community around it lives on. 

Yes, unfortunately I've to make the decision to drop support for Greasemonkey coz it uses the GM.(dot) API which is different from GM_(underscore) API supported by both TamperMonkey and Violentmonkey. 

The slow bottleneck happens once for each game data fetching, that data is reused afterwards.

(+1)

Maybe this wouldn't be a problem if Itch.io would ban games like "The True Ingredients", "Potrick Snaps 2" and the 100th PS1 styled copycat of PuppetCombo. They are intentionally shoddy because quantity is better than quality and on top of that these dudes make money off moron children who saw their favourite YTbers play them. 

Hell I wish Steam did the same to asset flips and Garten of BanBan cos let's be honest here they've got no business even being there, but Steam is a faceless entity I don't think they'll ever do anything about it, so I hope itch does something about it. I seriously like using it and posting my stuff from time to time and it's lame to see the amount of effortless garbage on there.

If atleast they were funny (as in so bad it's good kinda way or atleast there was a real attempt to make a game), but free (as in it costs 0, period) bad games then I'd see the point in keeping them. Itch.io also faces the risk of some executive from Nickelodeon or whatever going after them for copyright infringement.


(+6)

Can we at least have a tag called  "Not a visual novel" so I can filter out visual novels? Way too many of them nowadays

(+6)

https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/465834-e-itch-io-exclude-tag-may-2023-fork-vn-...

(+2)

A true hero

(+1)

Got one for "survival horror"\ "horror" games?

(+14)

Hello! I'm glad that this post is sticky, but... why not just add this feature already? It's been like this for at least 5 years. Here are some related threads I've found on the topic:

https://itch.io/t/2020007/filter-out-tags - 1 year ago (links to next)

https://itch.io/t/653769/can-i-exclude-horror-games-tag - 3 years ago (links to next)

https://itch.io/t/160014/can-i-use-exclusion-filters - 5 years ago (an admin actually provides a URL suffix, so obviously there's a way to fix this)

I know NoTimeToPlay (tagged as a moderator) has been answering all of these threads with "I can't do anything about it", but we also have seen Leafo respond to this issue with a temporary and limited solution. Surely he, or other developers of itch.io can expedite this issue so that itch.io isn't seen by non-developers as a horror games platform..

(1 edit) (+6)

I, for one, would like to be able to exclude multiple tags when I search for new games that may interest me. And it's not even about the LGBT stuff. I just think being able to include and exclude keywords is such a basic search functionality that I don't understand why it's not already there.

(1 edit) (+7)

Can we please exclude all games tagged "Visual Novel" from the list?

I am not scrolling though hundreds of games I don't want to see just to miss the few hidden jewels among them.

We need filters to exclude tags please.

How hard can it be?

+tag for including filter
-tag for excluding filter

(1 edit) (+1)

A thousand kids make naive games on the same topic is the problem very few addressed. I don’t pay for the service, I was glad to find this place and chose to support it. So what are the kids saying so loud on “your” search pages? Horror. Horror and Visual novels. Maybe that’s a noise we need to listen to. XP

(+3)

To be fair, repeated games with the same concept but different styles isn't a problem only on itchio, google play have the same problem as this one, guess they just don't care about the users when they're (one of) the largest platforms available

I can’t see where you’re speaking from. It seems to me you talk like you’re entitled to something when they actually don’t owe you anything. Of course, I may be missing something.

(+4)

> I can't see where you're speaking from.
They're speaking from the heart, silly :3

> It seems to me you talk like you’re entitled to something when they actually don’t owe you anything.
As a user of their platform, they're entitled a good user experience. I hope that's something you strive to bring your users as a game developer ;)

> Of course, I may be missing something.
How very self-aware! You're gonna get far in life.

(+2)

Well I mean, the other guy just said everything I need to clarify. We're users of a platform, we deserve to have good services from the platforms, it's basic software engineering and marketing.

And yes I'm saying that as an IT student so I know what I'm saying, don't worry.

(1 edit)

You’re appealing to authority as an IT student. The “other guy” essentially insulted me. None of it is useful to the thread.

Would you try and explain to me how using something and deserving anything are linked?

(1 edit) (+2)

the simplest way to explain it would be that the usability of something is directly connected with how happy the users would be when using that something, and how happy the users are determines whether the product is good enough in the long run

Take DeviantArt as an example, it was considered THE best G-rated art website a few years ago, and now a lot of users have stopped using the website and would rather stick to social media instead (DA users, I said "a lot", not "all". Don't reply with "Oh I'm still using DA"). Why did that happen? There was a change in UI that was sudden and changed almost everything that everyone had to relearn how to use the website, which is a BIG no in terms of website maintenance, and they didn't revert it at all, I think it's because they thought the users would be patient in learning everything again, which didn't happen, and now DA lost a lot of its users, but it still works as there are still some old users that stayed and new users that didn't have to go through that

Now how is that relevant to itchio? It's having a similar situation where a lot of people are complaining about the same topic, in this case, the tag exclusion feature, and in DeviantArt's case the sudden UI change. I know it's been a long time since we asked for it but we're still here, but I'm sure the active users of Itchio are reducing, I mean look at the recent games, all of them are either low effort, horror, visual novel or all of them, the only ones that can be rated as "good enough" is the occasional big projects and a few of the ones that won game jams, from what I see these two are the only things keeping Itchio alive.

I understand all that. But how do users deserve this change? What makes the devs “owe” users this change? It’s the part I don’t get. We could agree that they “owe it to themselves”, to the “legacy of their work” or something like that. You seem to think it’s in their best interest to make that change. It’s a strange position to be in, affirming you know someone’s best interest when they say it isn’t and when it’s obvious the change you want is in your best interest.

I don’t think itch is here to provide you with the service you are expecting from it.

Let’s say it is though. What good is it repeating it to people who won’t hear your claim? Is this forum a sort of democratic space? Was it ever in any way presented so?

I think you’re assessing the situation very incorrectly and I need arguments to change my view.

(1 edit) (+1)

To conclude, I find it healthy that people ask for features, I just find the strategy and entitled tone of some messages here are bound to miss the mark.

(+2)

Well... to put it simply (from what I've learnt), they owe the users a usable interface and functions because users can switch to better platforms when given the chance, which we haven't.. yet. So.. yeah If there's suddenly a platform with the same features as itchio but with multiple tag exclusion feature, a LOT of people would switch pretty quickly, if said platform is developed in the right ways (feel free to ask about the details).

(4 edits) (+1)

I’m glad you are willing to make the best of this discussion, which others have failed before. Note that what you are saying is that the devs of itch.io have an interest in adding this feature. That has nothing to do with owing something to users. I already addressed this aspect: the people asking obviously have that interest. I trust Leafo that he knows what their best interest is. They’ve heard you, they just don’t agree with you. For me, that’s the point where I would think about the leverage I can find or drop the case. In a way, this thread is sort of this leverage: showing your number, I just want to remind people that being rude is not how you get people to agree with you. A handful of mere “+1” would do more I guess than 1 good, reasonable point made. I wish you success in your endeavour.

(+3)

I would love to exclude games that are in early access. 

(+7)

The current user experience when browsing games is way more time consuming than it could be. I know which tags I have no interest in playing so let me exclude them.

(+5)

And most horror games should add an adult tag just like porn games, because they both should not be exposed to children.

(+9)

Can’t believe that after all these years still the only way to exclude anything is to manually add something to the end of the URL and it’s not even possible to exclude multiple tags at all. Trying to find anything here is a miserable experience.

(+6)

It's stunning that there's no proper filter feature of any kind on a website that's existed this long. Given the longterm refusal to even address the issue by anybody with any actual power or influence over the site (No offense, mods), it seems pretty clear they don't care. May as well just officially endorse folks' web extensions at this point; I'm beyond tired of seeing the umpteenth Five Nights at Wuzzy's Fuzzy Ass Playhouse: For Real (SCARY!!) mishmash clone when I look up "puzzle" or "gay". Even using the singular filter tag that can even be applied in the url, removing -horror still leaves me with a pile of click-through games and visual novels designed for people who enjoy staring at big booba anime women. Deviant Art has a better filtering system than this.

(+8)

1. Install uBlock Origin

2. Go to "My Filters", add the following filter:
itch.io##div[class^="game_cell"]:has-text(/Visual Novel/)

3. You're welcome

(+2)

I am curious. Does anyone know a game site where you actually can exclude tags? Other than Steam. I know Steam can do that. But I also know that several others can not do that, or I am unable to find that feature.

It seems to me, that tags are rare and exclusion even rarer. While it would be a nice feature, at the same time this is not a common feature. Even on steam it is kinda hidden. You have to click on the right side instead of the left side or middle of a tag in the search page.

Humblestore has no tags. You can positivly filter for genre and other stuff.

Epicgames has no tags. You can combine some genres to filter.

Gamejolt has some hashtags, but I could not even find out how to combine them.

Origin/EA does not seem to have tags either. You can select a genre and then filter for franchise or age restriction.

Gog has tags, but I only found how to combine them. Not how to exclude them.

Not a download store, but Armorgames has no exclusion either.

Google Play Store seems to have tags, but I neither found how to search for a tag, nor how to combine, lest exclude them.

Playstation Store can combine genres as filters, but exclusion I could not find.

Amazon. You can exclude stuff in a search with preceding -. But that is not a tag exclusion, just a regular search. I could try search itch with google and exclude items.

Moderator(+3)

People love saying "everyone else has this feature already and it works great!" when it's not remotely true. Wouldn't be the first time. They tried to complain the same way about payouts, back when itch.io had the shortest turnaround out of all the major websites where you could sell stuff. It's almost as if truth was an inconvenience.

(+3)

Oh, there are content sites with exclusion of tags, but specific to gaming it seems rare, except for the market leader. One would think that many would imitate Steam for that, but apparantly not.

Might have to do with the catalogue size. Of the other sites, Steam has the biggest by far, yet they only have ~160k titles compared to the ~850k titles on itch (560k claim released status). And of course, the other sites usually lack the tags to begin with.

I believe Steam just added it, because it was dirt cheap to add into their existing framwork of tagging. It starts with them having only a limited selection of tags and when filtering their catalogue by tags it appears as "tag" and "-tag", so basically, even the exclusion tags are positive searches.

In contrast to "filtering" on itch, that is done (or appears) as added sub urls. My guess is, that there is not really filtering done at all. It is a cross-section of overlapping url conditions. And there just aren't nightly builds of negative tags that could be overlapped. There would have to be built two lists for every tag, and since tags are custom, one does not just build a list of 1-million-minus-the-seven-games-with-obscure-tag to overlap ... for every obscure tag.

So starting at my guess, filtering would not be integrateable into existing browse, but would have to be added on top. For singular that was trivial. For multiple, it apparantly is not.

But it might be a help to many, if the existing option would be available as an UI element in browse. I would not need it, but that is because I do not put too much weight on tags anyways. Dev tagging is often horrible. Tags on Steam are user chosen by majority. At least it says "Popular user-defined tags for this product" under a game.

(+4)

as you said, it's as if the truth was an inconvenience...

I mean as the other guy said, itchio needs this because it is a problem here on itchio, not because it's just a simple "Quality of Life improvement", I see lots of other (dare I say, unnecessary) updates but this problem has never been solved, I doubt the Devs are even taking this problem seriously. I don't know what happened back then, but I'm pretty sure it's a much-needed improvement here... 

Moderator (2 edits) (+3)

It's been frustrating for me too, not knowing what to tell people for such a long time, but I trust the dev team. If they weren't able to do it in years, there must be a good reason. Edit: in all this time, people continue to demand and assume bad faith, which is doubly frustrating. There are many other features on itch.io that can help us discover games, but people won't use them because they've decided that the one thing they want is tag exclusion and nothing else.

(+1)

If people assume bad faith, they should apply Hanlon's razor. Also, if I were to believe the threads about tagging and exclusion, I would also have to assume horror is unpopular. Well, horror is very popular on itch, so maybe tag exclusion is not in such a high demand, as those threads might suggest. After all, the people happy with recommendations and related games and other means of finding games do not regularly make community threads about how things are ok. It is the people fed up with horror stuff that do.

Sure, it might be a handy feature in some situations. But would it be a feature that most users would use? Or is this one of those scenarious, where the people able to use that feature would not need it, cause they would know how to find stuff without it.

I have trouble believing someone looking for the 10k new games in the last month. Like, itch show me everything, except horror and visual novels, I will dig through the remaining 8k games myself. To be realistic, you have to start somehow with positive filtering. And this should thin out the games already. And who knows, maybe that puzzle platformer pixel adventure you might like, does has some minor horror elements that made the dev chose horror tag - after all, horror is popular, so everyone and their dog is tagging it.

(3 edits) (+3)

Games that are actually not so welcome, such as horror games, dominate the front page.

Excluding tags is just what people think is a good solution to this problem.

Other websites don’t have this problem, so their need for it is not urgent.

Steam will not put horror games on your home page after you click “dislike” on some horror game.

(+2)

Do you talk about the actual front page or the front page of browse? Because the actual front page is not very dominated by horror. It is featured games, bundles, jams etc.

But Horror is the most popular tag on itch. Followed by visual novel. Then simulation, then roguelike. It says so on the front page upper left corner.

In contrast to Steam the presentation is somewhat inverted. Once logged in, you are presented with a ton of recommendations and some popular games list is a minor part of the page. On itch front page, recommendations are one side scroll hidden in the middle.

So anyways, itch should not recommend horror games to you, after you liked and played some other games. But you need to go to the actual recommendation area and not the front page or browse.

(Please do not try to downvote random horror games to adjust your recommendations. Not only would this be unfair, we also do not know how much this would be weighted in contrast to your positive interactions. Furthermore, to downvote such games, you would have to interact with those games, so itch might actually be convinced you do like them horror games ;-)

(+1)

I’m not saying tag exclusion is unnecessary, but the way my network of community is organized precludes the need for search: we follow a dozen of “scout” accounts who look through what’s coming out, others dig in the archives, and putting that knowledge in common, we are like a review media leviathan hooked up as several collectives. If the interface doesn’t do it, work around is something you can do right here right now. #dont-flail-against-the-world

Moderator(+1)

Oh, it could be very useful. Got a few tags I'd like to put on my own "don't show me this stuff" list. But until that becomes a possibility, what am I supposed to do. Demand, assume bad faith, and refuse to use any other tools at my disposal?

Deleted 322 days ago
(+3)

Please feel free to comment on https://itch.io/t/3283176/how-to-not-exclude-this-tag

(+8)

I can't imagine why the devs would refuse to work on this, and refuse to comment on it... Is the reason this is still a problem after years embarrassing or something?

(+1)

evidently the one solution, adding "?exclude=tg.(tag)" doesn't even work right now, at least on my end. it's been way too long for this to be addressed in a real capacity. I had assumed all the games were simply improperly tagged, but no, if you filter to include only horror, the same games show up.

That is something on your end. That url below will give you no results.

https://itch.io/games/tag-horror?exclude=tg.horror
(+3)

searching for games is tiring when the before mentioned by mods, positive search fails you hard. You could spam all tags but the ones you don't want ALL day, you'd quickly notice they(devs of games) also tags their games with other tags that you DO want to see.


I am tired of Visual Novels, Text Based and "Simulation" that is mostly just simulating words on top of a drawn background and person... so... a visual novel... just not tagged as one... and searching for 3D, Action, Adventure and whatever else still doesn't work as visual novels can have 3D backgrounds and characters. And the story can be one of action and/or adventure. Even tho that's not what the game genre itself means. Anyways, my point is: multiple tag exclusion is a must if people do not properly tag their games. Can't be having more action/adventure visual novels...

Maybe now that the new search feature is rolled out, site developers might have time for other projects.

My concern is, that a fully implemented multiple tag exclusion as seen on Steam (if you look for it) is not a trivial task to implement in the existing framework.

Personally, I have little use for the feature. I am an adult and can surf without ad blocker. If I can scroll past ads I do not care for, I can scroll past games I do not care for. The typical offenders, horror and visual novels, are also typically recogniseable at a glance. There is just too much inconsistency and disagreement about tag usage to rely on any filtering.

(+2)

I love the new layout for the winter sale! I hope it stays that way. It emphasizes devlogs and content from those I follow. Far better than seeing a host of horror games first-thing.


Still waiting on the exclude filter.

(1 edit)

what have they done!? it's right back to the way it was tot


EDIT: Ok now it's back... hope i didn't jinx it 😳

Deleted 322 days ago
Moderator(+1)

I draw the line at this sort of insult. Even my patience has limits. Also, this topic has gone on for too long without any helpful conclusions.

Moderator locked this topic