You grab a book with great excitement. You have read the first chapter, or perhaps two. Then life comes. The book sits on the nightstand. A week passes. A month passes. Eventually, it is moved to the shelf, still with the bookmark on page 47. In a world made for 30-second videos and constant notifications, …
Month: March 2026
You recall seeing your buddies crowd around a CRT television in the late 1990s, thumbs flying over plastic controllers. Perhaps you passed by the gaming aisle in high school, feeling a mix of interest and the nagging sense that you were “too old” to start. Decades have passed. Colleagues discussing “Elden Ring” or “Baldur’s Gate …
You have just concluded a long day. You grab your controller, put on your headset, and log into your favorite game. You’re excited to unwind, plan, and have fun. However, within two minutes of the contest commencing, someone from your team is yelling into the microphone. Another player is exchanging aggressive messages in the conversation. …
You’re ready to build your ideal gaming setup. But as soon as you check out YouTube or TikTok, you see curved monitors, RGB lights, gaming chairs that look like race car seats, and keyboards that cost more than your rent. It’s overwhelming. All this gear is designed to make you feel like you need to …
You finally get 45 minutes of alone time. The children are sleeping, the household tasks are done, or you’ve just finished a long workday. You settle in, open your gaming library (or the PlayStation Store, Steam, or App Store), and suddenly, an overwhelming surge of stress washes over you. “Should I keep playing that 100-hour …
You’re in a ranked match, the pressure is on, and suddenly everything falls apart. Maybe a teammate makes a weird mistake, the opponent gets lucky, or your character just won’t do what you want. Frustration quickly takes over. Next thing you know, you’ve slammed your controller on the desk, ripped off your headset, and hit …
We have all been there. You’ve just ended a long day at work or school and now have a few hours to yourself. You turn on your PC or console, look at your game library, and instead of being excited, you feel… nothing. You skim through your backlog for twenty minutes, unsure what to play. …
Gaming has a unique appeal that few other pastimes can match. Unlike reading a book or going on a run, games are designed to keep you engaged—variable reward loops, cliffhangers before natural stopping points, and online sessions where signing out means leaving real people behind. That is not a complaint; it is simply the reality …
Retro gaming isn’t usually appealing because people want simpler graphics. Instead, it’s usually about going back to a time when games could be played right away, had clear art direction, and weren’t finished goods that needed patches right away. But it’s not as easy to play Super Nintendo, Sega Genesis, or PlayStation 1 games these …
It’s easier than ever to stream games, but there’s a bigger difference between “technically live” and “actually watchable” than most newcomers think. The software is free and only needs a small amount of hardware, but it takes a lot of configuration work to get everything set up so that your stream doesn’t look like it …









