I've been thinking along Animal Crossing New Horizons Bells these lines, too. Just prepared for something new. I have been trying to catch a PS5 or a Xbox collection X for a couple months (no luck so far). I'll still keep my Switch round for whenever BOTW2 comes out or possibly Odyssey 2 or some other very exciting games, but I'm really excited to branch out a bit and try these out Netflix-style game catalog streaming things. I believe it's where gaming is headed and it's actually consumer friendly.
(FWIW, I think Nintendo is like 30% of the way there using their NES and SNES libraries. If they added N64 and Gamecube, and keep fleshing out the collections, plus add in certain current-gen titles, it might be a pretty competitive support... but that's a very long way off, if they ever get it done...)
Just like you mention, I am also very sick of spending $60 for a 10-15 hour game. And that I have a fantastic job and salary and operate fulltime. It feels like too much.
If a match takes longer than that then the odds of me actually completing it crash. I work full time and have a pretty shitty schedule so I can only just game on the weekends the majority of the time.
I have also found that devs throw in a lot of useless filler crap or else they inflate the difficulty of the game so it takes longer because they know they'll face backlash if it's too short. I really hate feeling as if my time has been wasted.
Games that are 10 hours or less are perfect. I'll gladly spend $60 on a 8-10 hour game that's concise and does not waste my own time.
There is a couple Buy Nook Miles Ticket twitter accounts/subreddits you may follow to have upgrades on PS5 restocks!
For gamers seeking concise experiences, 10-hour titles provide the perfect balance between engagement and time management. Similarly, platforms like 만화토끼 offer compact yet fulfilling content, catering to those who appreciate quality over quantity in their leisure pursuits.