


Pip: The top rated - one of these things is not like the others.Īlec: Looking at what's included in the app itself I don't think they realised that would happen, bless 'em. Like, if you want to watch porn you watch porn - what's the point of having it playing in the background like it's Radio 4?Īlice: Because you can combine it WITH Radio 4 and have the bodies on your desktop jiggle in real time with an Archers conversation about drainage in the upper field. I think I'm just not the target demographic for this. Which mean moar weeaboo wallpaper obviously" "I set a pornographic movie for my wallpaper Looks like the big draw is that you can download a gazillion user-made animated wallpapers from the Steam Workshop, or upload your own. Pip: What's that screensaver tool you mentioned? The one that's in the Steam charts, I meanĪlec: Something called Wallpaper Engine. So, what is this thing, and why would an estimated ( via SteamSpy not necessarily accurate, of course) three quarters of a million people be using it instead of just, y'know, setting a desktop wallpaper? And, of course, is this £3/$4 application any good? The finest minds in Christendom gathered to investigate - and to show off the best and worst animated wallpapers they found for it.

It's a desktop wallpaper tool, and it's outselling almost everything else on Steam. This week brought a true oddity, however: Wallpaper Engine. The Steam charts are reliably staid much of the time - ever-present Counter-Strikes and GTAs, whatever the multiplayer survival flavour of the month is, and a big new release if there was one.
