New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady has put together quite an impressive resume over his illustrious NFL career over the last 18 seasons.

When takes the field on Saturday night for the divisional round matchup against the Tennessee Titans, Brady will set a few NFL playoff records as he's set to become the all-time leader in playoff games played, according to Michael David Smith of Pro Football Talk.

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady will play in his NFL-record 35th career postseason game on Saturday, adding to a long list of playoff records that he owns.

Since taking over the reigns as the starting quarterback for the Patriots, Brady has led the team to much success under center that saw seen them win five Super Bowls, 15 AFC East division titles, and 15th seasons with at least double-digit wins in the regular season.

He also holds various other records as he could extend it to 26 games won in the playoffs by a starting quarterback, most touchdown passes (63), most passing yards (9,094), most passes completed (831), and most 300-yard passing performances (12). On top of that, he is also the owner of a few Super Bowl records such as most wins by a quarterback (five), touchdown passes (150), passing yards (2,071), passes completed (207), and passes attempted (309).

Brady has certainly made a living in the postseason having missed it just twice in his career with once coming due to an ACL injury. The 40-year-old could add much more this postseason with another deep playoff run that will only further strengthen his Pro Football Hall of Fame resume.

Many have endeared as being arguably the greatest quarterback to play the game, and these accolades have supplemented that argument to a greater degree. The only questions that remain at this point is how many years he plans to play, and how many of those will he be able to perform at an elite level.