@OutrageousHairdo
@hexbear.netI gathered as much from the Wikipedia page, but I was curious about the "mentality" being talked about, the psychological aspect, since Wikipedia mostly just discusses basic facts and events.
What do you mean by "Schlafly mentality?" I'm not really well-read on the history there.
Bees occasionally build hives inside peoples' homes. Like, between floors or walls. You can imagine this situation is not terribly pleasant.
Bees are pests if they're in your house. Like, one or two getting stuck in, yeah I'll help them find their way back home, but beehives inside your house? Nightmarish. Happens more in cold places, I'm told, since houses are warm.
I get what you're saying, but we have to draw the line between animals and vermin somewhere. Ticks, ants, bees, mosquitoes, roaches... these creatures are pests, and aren't worth the same consideration as, say, a bird or whatever. Everyone's line is somewhere different - maybe you are fine with spiders, maybe you hate even some mammals like rats, but there are some pretty reasonable experiential reasons people hold these opinions. It's easy enough to think a rat is cute when there aren't a bunch scurrying around your apartment complex making a mess of the place.
I do think there are of course exceptions. I'll never sympathize with people who go after animals that stay outside in their natural habitats, stuff like gophers or whatever. They have to live somewhere, after all.
You can sort Steam games chronologically, which will show you an unfiltered list of new games by release date. To do this, go to "New & Noteworthy" at the Store page header, click "New Releases" from the submenu, then scroll down.
Switch the games listing from "Popular New Releases" to just "New Releases." This will show you a list of the most recently released games on Steam.
If you want to see a full, page-based list of all the releases on Steam, click the button "All New Releases." The results here can easily be narrowed by genre, release type (e.g. excluding Sountracks and Demos), language, price, and other factors. Bear in mind Steam will still exclude Adult games if you've set Steam to do so (which I believe may be the default). Other filters for mature content will also be applied if you've set them up to. Steam will tell you at the top of the page if it's doing this.
If you do want a more curated experience (but don't want an opaque algorithm filtering things out), you can always change the sort method at the top right. There are other ways to get to this menu (it's the same one Steam uses for user searches!), and other cool ways to find games, but this is one that works if you genuinely want to see everything with no algorithm deciding on your behalf what you want to see. Asset flips are actually not too common these days because they're not financially viable on Steam any more (because new releases need to "earn" featuring from Steam and because of the refund policy), but you will still find a lot of mobile ports if you do this.