Really cool, dsh!
What I found most interesting about the reaction issue was that even though your article takes pains to outline your opinion that a game's "beaten" status is subjective to the player -- which therefore negates the idea that you're using this list as any kind of bragging right -- a great deal of the outraged comments came from people incensed at your proclaiming gaming victories in anything but the most challenging/completionist of circumstances.
dsheinem wrote:What all that means, ultimately, is that I very much treat my backlog as a library and my game playing as research into the medium.
I am so, so glad you brought this up in your reaction piece. This is what I thought many of the responders were missing: that games are more than challenges, they're also a medium with a history that people want to explore and understand. It's understandable, though. This doesn't jump to people's minds very often, since even a lot of the appreciation-bent efforts that crop up in the mainstream aren't super-scholarly. (I remember being a bit disappointed by "The Art of Video Games," but to be fair I can't really speak for this since I only read the book and didn't visit the actual exhibit.) I'm really glad that you probably planted this concept in a lot of minds.