The Australian was talking after his side continued their stranglehold over cross-city rivals Hull FC in Britain's Super League on Friday.
Peters has presided over an unprecedented era of success in east Hull, ending a 40-year trophy drought by winning a domestic treble in 2025 before Rovers clinched World Cup Challenge glory in February.
In Hull KR's first outing since it was announced that Peters will stand down at the end of 2026 to take charge at PNG Chiefs, who are expected to start operations in 2028, the Robins beat Hull FC 24-6 in the 250th Hull derby.
Even though Hull KR claimed a seventh successive win in this fixture in what was his last Good Friday derby, Peters was adamant he put no extra emphasis on the occasion apart from a family photograph.
"I'm not going to home in on every time there is a last time because there's going to be possibly a few," Peters said. "Nothing changes for me, I'm absolutely proud of what I do and who I represent.
"We've got a long year ahead, we've got a lot we want to tick off, so I'll worry about all that sort of stuff at the back end of the year. We've got a fair bit to get through.
"I'm really pleased with this result, and actually it's just about getting a result in the derby. Sometimes it doesn't matter too much how it looks but there were some good periods there for us."
Jack Broadbent, Oli Gildart and Jez Litten all touched down before Joe Burgess bagged a brace to add gloss to the scoreline in a tight affair, where windy conditions impacted both teams.
"Winning this game means a lot to a lot of people, it's bigger than two points to a lot of people but it is just two points," Peters added.