Game rating website
Give every game a clear 1–10 score, then add optional ratings for the parts that shaped your opinion. GamingList keeps those ratings beside your review, platform, hours and backlog status.

Score diamonds make ratings easy to scan across lists, profiles, game pages and community activity. Labels such as Amazing or Masterpiece help the number keep its meaning.
Rate relevant areas such as gameplay, story, world, characters, visuals and audio. The available categories can reflect what matters for that game instead of forcing every genre into the same template.
Your review appears with the current score, platform, hours and status. Edit the list entry later and the public review stays aligned with your latest view.
Game pages show community rating distributions and reviews, while your own score remains the center of your personal list and profile.
Add the game to the list and record whether you are playing, paused, completed or somewhere else.
Pick a score from 1–10 and optionally rate the game’s key creative areas.
Add a review, then compare your take with other players on the game page.
The practical details before you move your backlog into one place.
No. A score and status are enough. Written reviews and category ratings are optional.
Yes. Ratings represent your current opinion and can be edited from the game page, normal list editor or Quick rate.
No. Plan to Play and Waiting for Sale entries cannot keep a score. This prevents wishlist entries from being counted as played ratings.
GamingList combines available community ratings with external game data while the local vote count is small. The community contribution increases as more players rate the title.
Start with your favorites, your disappointments, or the games you finished this year.