Fans Say “There Are Too Many Games Now to Care About All of Them,” and It’s Changing How Seasons Feel “Nothing Feels Special”
For many fans, one of the biggest changes in sports isn’t about how the games are played.
It’s about how often they happen.
There was a time when each game felt like an event. You looked forward to it. You planned around it. And when it happened, it felt like it mattered.
But now, more fans are starting to say something different.
There are just too many games.
At first, that might not sound like a problem. More games should mean more opportunities to watch, more chances for excitement, and more moments to follow.
But in reality, the effect has been more complicated.
Because when games are happening constantly, it becomes harder for any single one to stand out.
That’s the core of what fans are feeling.
It’s not that the games themselves aren’t good. It’s that they don’t carry the same weight.
If there’s always another game tomorrow, today’s game doesn’t feel as important.
And over time, that changes how people engage with the entire season.
Instead of following every game, fans are starting to pick and choose. They’ll watch the big matchups. The key moments. The games that feel like they matter.
But the rest?
They’re easier to skip.
That doesn’t mean fans don’t care—it means they’re being more selective.
And that selectiveness is becoming more common.
Another part of this shift is how seasons are structured now. In many leagues, the number of games, the pacing, and the scheduling have created a feeling of constant activity.
There’s always something happening.
But ironically, that constant activity can make everything feel less urgent.
It’s similar to how people respond to anything that’s always available.
When something is limited, it feels more valuable. When it’s constant, it becomes easier to take for granted.
That’s what some fans are starting to notice in sports.
The moments are still there. The talent is still there. But the sense of buildup—the feeling that something is leading toward a bigger moment—doesn’t always hit the same way.
And that’s where the phrase keeps coming up.
“Nothing feels special anymore.”
It’s not a criticism of the games themselves.
It’s a reflection of how the experience has changed.
Because when everything matters a little, it can start to feel like nothing matters as much as it used to.
