With 2025 coming to a close, and Christmas just around the corner, most game companies have taken the next few weeks off.
“OH MY GOD?! IT’S ALMOST CHRISTMAS!!!! What do I do? My kid/wife/husband/secret santa wanted some game about…I don’t know, Claire Danes, or ghosts who YOLO, or a #2 combo from Hardee’s; or maybe something that had all three? Do those exist? If they don’t exist what can I get?? HELP ME!”
Okay, okay, stop fretting, I got you covered. I’ll be giving you a buyer’s guide for each month with my top picks in BOLD. What were the best games to come out; which ones sucked, and which ones flew under the radar and deserve your attention? Get ready to find out!
Since this guide tends to be on the long side, and in the interest of keeping your attention, I will be splitting it into two parts; January to June and July to December. Get your pencils ready, folks, because the games are coming fast and I hope you’re taking notes.
January:
- Best – Donkey Kong Country Returns HD, Dynasty Warriors: Origins, Orcs Must Die! Deathtrap, Phantom Brave: The Lost Hero, Sniper Elite: Resistance, Star Wars Episode I: Jedi Power Battles, Tales of Graces f Remastered, The Sims & The Sims 2 Legacy Collection, Ys Memoire: The Oath in Felghana
- Avoid – Synduality: Echo of Ada
- Hidden Gem – Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector (Recommended by CedricTheOwl), GuGu Pizza : Delivering Pizza to the Space Station? Boss, this is just not right! (Recommended by Andy), Lonely Mountain: Snow Riders (Recommended by Lamb Dance Revolution), The Roottrees are Dead (Recommended by Toothpic Monsoon)
January was a bit unique this year as we had, for the first time that I can remember, some really solid choices right from the start. One game, however, stood out among the rest, and that was Dynasty Warriors: Origins, the latest entry in the long running series from Omega Force and Koei Tecmo. Moving away from the open-world format of Dynasty Warriors 9, Origins gave players an overworld map to explore, engaging in the series’ trademark battles when entering various points of interest. While Dynasty Warriors has traditionally been full of unique playable characters that you can choose from at will, Origins opted to have the game focus on one specific character, a generic, nameless player stand-in, that could switch weapons between stages. In my opinion, this took some of the fun away from the game, as I like how zany and different these characters look & feel. However, the gameplay is really solid and can get very difficult at times. It’s a great return to form for the franchise.
If you’re a RPG fan, January had three major titles for you to choose from. The lone, brand new entry was Phantom Brave: The Lost Hero, a tactical RPG from Nippon Ichi Software (makers of the Disgaea series) and serves as the sequel to the 2004 PS2 title, Phantom Brave; better late than never. Our other two RPGs are remasters/remakes; first is Tales of Graces f Remastered, the third version of the game to come to consoles (this one being an update to the PS3 title that was an update to the Wii title). The other is Ys Memoire: The Oath in Felghana, a remaster of the remake of the SNES title Ys III: Wanderers from Ys. I played this from start to finish back in January and was so proud of myself. I’m a big boy!
Nintendo started off the year with an HD port of Donkey Kong Country Returns for the Switch, and we got two other ports in a trend that seemed to dominate 2025, bizarre and unique titles coming out of nowhere. The weirdest in January was Star Wars Episode I: Jedi Power Battles, originally released for the PlayStation in 2000, while the most shocking was the surprise shadow drop of The Sims & The Sims 2 Legacy Collection (both are still better than The Sims 4). Finally, in ACTUAL new games, we got Orcs Must Die! Deathtrap, which includes 4 player co-op and released to solid reviews, while Sniper Elite: Resistance, another game I finished in January, dropped in to satisfy all of your Nazi killing urges.
Our title to avoid from January is the extraction shooter Synduality: Echo of Ada, an always online live-service title that was received poorly by critics. This game also features a common theme that you will see among many of this year’s titles to avoid, persistent use of AI for art assets, something I find awfully gauche and tacky. As if trying to play an online game that almost no one plays is bad enough, you’ll have to contend with art assets and dialogue generated by AI because, like, why pay someone to make it?
Instead, why not check out one of the many hidden gems that the New Game Releases community enjoyed. CedricTheOwl recommends Citizen Sleeper 2: Starward Vector, saying, “The same hybrid formula of text adventure game and RPG as the first game, except now you can recruit a party of hard luck spacers to fly around doing missions, overthrowing corporate overlords, and generally doing your best Cowboy Bebop impression“. Your handsome reporter, Andy Tuttle, recommends GuGu Pizza : Delivering Pizza to the Space Station? Boss, this is just not right!, a bizarre “rage bait” game in which you take on the role of a pigeon who must deliver pizzas to a space station, climbing up a ridiculous amount of objects in order to reach space.
Lamb Dance Revolution recommends Lonely Mountain: Snow Riders, saying that, while this skiing game has a simple presentation and a chill experience, there are a lot of cool stunts to pull off, and that figuring out how to do them is incredibly fun (it just recently released on PS5, too). Toothpic Monsoon recommends The Roottrees are Dead, calling it an excellent deduction game that reminds them of The Case of the Golden Idol, saying, “A rich family dies in a plane crash and you’re hired to figure out who is actually related to them so the family inheritance goes into the right hands. Discover the story of crazy rich people being crazy“.
February:
- Best – Avowed, Civilization VII, Kingdom Come: Deliverance II, Like a Dragon: Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage – Tape 1, Monster Hunter Wilds, PGA Tour 2K25, The Legend of Heroes: Trails Through Daybreak II, Yu-Gi-Oh! Early Days Collection
- Avoid – Moons of Darsalon
- Hidden Gem – Dawnfolk (Recommended by Brakeman), Rift of the NecroDancer (Recommended by Lamb Dance Revolution), Urban Myth Dissolution Center (Recommended by Merve)
For February, I went with Kingdom Come: Deliverance II as the top title, even if Pirate Yakuza is more up my alley. In any case, Deliverance II was both a critical and commercial success, moving 2 million copies in its first two weeks of release, and has been hailed as one of the best video games of 2025. This action RPG is, unlike other medieval set games, set in the real world and not some fantasy playland full of goblins and trolls. Instead, the game takes place in what we know today as Czech Republic, and strives for realism. With various quests to go on, players will take part in a sweeping, epic story of intrigue and deception that promises to steal away hours of your life.
February was loaded with multiple games that could have easily been called the best of the month, including the aforementioned Like a Dragon: Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii, the latest entry in the long running series. In this game, a companion to 2024’s Infinite Wealth, players follow series anti-hero Goro Majima as he wakes up on a deserted island with no memories. Hijinks ensue and everyone has a good laugh. Civilization VII dropped in February, looking to steal even more of your time than Kingdom Come: Deliverance II; not to be outdone in the time sucking department, The Legend of Heroes: Trails Through Daybreak II, a massive RPG, finally hit North America in February.
Continuing the surge of time suckers, Monster Hunter Wilds dropped in February, a follow-up to Monster Hunter: Worlds that continued with the open-world approach. While it was a hit with critics and sold over 8 million copies, Wilds’ PC version was noted for its numerous bugs and gameplay issues, which likely kept it out of the “Game of the Year” conversation. In the category of “Games that right-wing dickheads hate”, Obsidian released the RPG Avowed which I found to be painfully dull, though I seem to be alone on that, while Don’t Nod put out a new episodic game, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage – Tape 1. Finally, if you like sports, there was PGA Tour 2K25, while our weird port was Yu-Gi-Oh! Early Days Collection, which contained multiple Game Boy titles in the Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise released between 1998 & 2004.
February’s game to avoid is Moons of Darsalon, an inconsequential side scrolling shooter that would probably be just fine any other year. Sadly, this game is yet another to jump in on the AI bandwagon, using the vile tool to create various art assets. These assets can be toggled on and off through in-game settings, which tells me they were at least aware enough to know that some people wouldn’t like the AI art. Well, maybe don’t use AI next time!
Instead, why not check out Brakeman’s recommendation, Dawnfolk, who says, “This pixelated, fantasy-themed city builder gets you right into the action with a brief tutorial before setting you loose on a dozen or so charming areas. You’re expected to balance your resources, as with any city-builder, but the stages and challenges are bite-sized enough that it’s always easy to bounce back from a bad run. Finally, it manages to avoid outstaying its welcome by ending before ever retreading familiar territory“. Lamb Dance Revolution recommends Rift of the NecroDancer, saying, “A classic rhythm game that’s nicely polished, with a fun soundtrack and some cute mini-games. At times challenging but really fun experience if you’re a fan of the genre“.
Finally, good ol’ Merve wants to recommend that you play Urban Myth Dissolution Center, saying it is “…a supernatural-themed point-and-click adventure where you investigate (apparently) paranormal goings-on, using both online research and good old-fashioned detective work. The blue-hued pixel art style is striking, and in my view, no game has done a better job of capturing the dynamics of anonymous social media and imageboards“.
March:
- Best – Assassin’s Creed: Shadows, Atelier Yumia: Alchemist of Memories & the Envisioned Land, Atomfall, MLB The Show 25, Split Fiction, Suikoden I & II HD Remaster, Two Point Museum, WWE 2K25, Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition
- Avoid – DC: Dark Legion
- Hidden Gem – The Children of Clay (Recommended by Blip), Little Wings Deliveries (Recommended by KingCrow), Rosewater (Recommended by CedricTheOwl)
Like February, March’s top title was one of the most critically acclaimed of the year, the co-op game Split Fiction. Telling the story of two competing authors, one who writes fantasy and one who writes sci-fi, as they both become trapped in their own works. As the two authors attempt to escape, they must solve puzzles that see them switching back and forth between a medieval fantasy world and a cyberpunk city. Like the previous two games from Hazelight Studios, It Takes Two and A Way Out, Split Fiction meant to be played with another person, at the same time on the same screen. Outspoken director Josef Fares continues to find major success wit this format, and I’m curious how much longer he intends to keep it going.
Our other big March title was the controversial Assassin’s Creed: Shadows, the first game in the long running series to take place in Feudal Japan. Initially planned for a November 2024 release, Shadows was delayed after a less than enthusiastic response to Star Wars: Outlaws, Ubisoft’s other big 2024 game, prompting the company to spend extra time to polish Shadows and address some of the issues that would have been carried over from Outlaws. It also didn’t help that the game became a lightning rod for ring wing trolls who decried Shadows’ perceived lack of authenticity, choice of protagonists (a lady and a black?!), and supposed “disrespect” for Japan. In the end, Shadows came out, it sold well and received decent scores from critics. It’s not the best samurai game of the year, nor is it it the best Assassin’s Creed game; it’s just a game.
In giant RPGs, players had three to chose from; Atelier Yumia: Alchemist of Memories & the Envisioned Land, the newest game in the long running series (for a whopping six months), and two ports, the long delayed Suikoden I & II HD Remaster, and Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition, one of the few remaining notable Wii U games to get a Switch port. Rounding things out, Two Point Museum became the third entry in what is now officially a multi-game franchise, while sports-nutz got to choose between MLB The Show 25 and WWE 2K25.
Out March title to avoid is DC: Dark Legion, one of your standard free-to-play, gacha type games that litter the mobile landscape. Look, folks, you must know by now if these kinds of games are for you, or not. They’re all exactly the same, i.e., get a couple cool characters at the start, go up levels quickly and easily in the beginning and then, inevitably, run into a brick wall that requires you to pay ridiculous amounts of money to speed up time/progress and obtain better characters. I could tell everyone in the world to stop playing these games until I’m blue in the face, but it wouldn’t do any good. The manipulation of your dopamine receptors is far too great, making it difficult to ignore their allure. We’re stuck with them.
Instead, let’s see what our readers have suggested. Blip recommends you play The Children of Clay, saying that this “…short, 15-ish minute point and click horror game…made using clay models through stop-motion…is one of the more unsettling experiences I had in gaming this year. Great use of atmosphere.” KingCrow recommends Little Wings Deliveries, saying that the game “…is about being a little pigeon in a world set in the sky. You sail a boat through through a beautiful low-fi cloud world of sky islands; and a giant cloud man is your friend. It’s all very relaxing and wobbly“.
Last up, CedricThe Owl has another adventure game recommendation, Rosewater, calling it a “…relatively simple story about building a posse of treasure hunters in a steampunk alt Old West that belies a lot of unusual mechanics in the adventure game space. A rare game where the second act is the best part, because it’s a fun road trip where you get to know your party, encounter a variety of adventure game weirdos, and ends with one of them being shot, possibly fatally“.
April:
- Best – Blue Prince, Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remaster, Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves, Forza Horizon 5, Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, Lost Records: Bloom & Rage – Tape 2, Lunar Remastered Collection, South of Midnight
- Avoid – Days Gone: Remastered
- Hidden Gem – Creepy Redneck Dinosaur Mansion 3 (Recommended by CedricTheOwl), Old Skies (Recommended by CedricTheOwl), Tempest Rising (Recommended by CedricTheOwl), Many Nights a Whisper (Recommended by KingCrow & Merve), StarVaders (Recommended by Zecko)
Before April, I would have assumed that Fatal Fury would have been the top game of the month; ha…HA! Little did I know that, from out of nowhere, we would get the winner of the 2025 TGA for Best Game and one of my favorite games of 2025; Clair Obscur: Expedition 33. Strongly influenced by the Final Fantasy franchise, Clair Obscur feels more like a modern version of FFVII than the actual modern version of FFVII. While you may be sick of hearing about this game, and annoyed by how it dominated the awards show landscape, I can promise you that Clair Obscur is a well made, brilliant video game that reminds you why you fell in love with the medium in the first place. It is, truly, a love letter to the RPG genre and to anyone who has ever picked up a controller or a mouse & keyboard.
Well, Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves might not be our top game for April, but it was still good, damnit! IT WON A GAME AWARD! We had another critical darling release in April, the puzzle game Blue Prince. The game is set inside a huge mansion that players must explore in order to inherit the princely estate. The catch, find all 46 rooms, the second catch, all the rooms shuffle around at the end of the day, making it a neigh impossible task. Not as critically acclaimed, but still the winner of a Game Award, is the Xbox console exclusive South of Midnight, which is coming to PS5 in 2026.
Speaking of Xbox games coming to PS5, April had two others, Forza Horizon 5 and Indiana Jones and the Great Circle. In the world of remasters, the Lunar Remastered Collection and likely tanked the retro game market for the original versions, while a surprise release of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remaster almost made me cry. Lastly, Don’t Nod finished off Lost Records: Bloom & Rage with the release of Tape 2.
I don’t really have a great game to tell you to avoid, from April, but if you gotta ignore something, it might a well be Days Gone: Remastered. Honestly, most of us have been ignoring this game since it launched in 2019, including publisher Sony, which has drawn the ire of the game’s director who claimed that the “woke media” hated the game. He sounds like a clown and that’s reason enough for me to keep on ignoring this game that I never thought looked all that great to begin with.
Instead, let’s check out what games our readers recommended. First up, CedricTheOwl thinks you should check out Creepy Redneck Dinosaur Mansion 3, which sounds like a shovelware PC title from 1993, who calls this “A parody mashup of Resident Evil and Dino Crisis that puts a creative spin on match 3 gameplay to make for an unusual RPG-like gameplay loop. Aggressively silly, but also takes a turn into the surreal the more its bonkers story develops“. Another recommendation from CedricTheOwl is Old Skies, saying, “It’s about a time travel tour guide, and the puzzles take full advantage of that fact to do some very clever things. The story is great as well, fully delving into the existential horror of living in a world where your friends, your favorite works of art, and even your history can be overwritten by time stream changes in the blink of an eye“.
This next recommendation comes from…CedricTheOwl…Tempest Rising, saying it’s an indie RTS “…that aims to be a spiritual successor to Command and Conquer so hard, they hired the composer of those games to work for them. A good way to scratch that RTS itch now that the Brotherhood of NOD is set to own EA“. Two readers, KingCrow and Merve recommend Many Nights a Whisper, praising its heartfelt writing and powerful story. Last up, Zecko recommends StarVaders, saying it is “A tactical strategy roguelite deck builder with a Space Invaders-esque framework. Aliens spawn at the top of the board and have their own movement and attack patterns they execute each turn. On your turn you play cards that let you move and attack and such. There’s a bit of Into the Breach in its DNA as well“.
May:
- Best – Capcom Fighting Collection 2, Despelote, Doom: The Dark Ages, Elden Ring: Nightreign, Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time, Onimusha 2: Samurai’s Destiny Remastered, Sea of Stars: Throes of the Watchmaker, Star Wars Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune
- Avoid – Game of Thrones: Kingsroad
- Hidden Gem – 9 Kings (Recommended by Jarathen), Cauldron (Recommended by Lamb Dance Revolution & Toothpic Monsoon), Monster Train 2 (Recommended by Brakeman), Poco (Recommended by Blip), to a T (Recommended by Andy)
While May has quite a few solid releases, I think most publishers wanted to avoid two things; getting lost in the Switch 2 new cycle for its upcoming June launch, and the release of Elden Ring: Nightreign. Not quite a sequel, more of a spin-off, Nightreign sends players back to Limgrave, now called Limveld, where they must work together with two other players to defeat a boss. Given three in-game days to prepare, players will spend their time in a procedurally generated map that shrinks over time, fighting mini-bosses before the big showdown. While it was a critical and commercial success, Nightreign didn’t generate the same hype as the original Elden Ring, but it certainly made a decent splash in a slow month.
The other big game from May was Doom: The Dark Ages, a medieval-inspired take on the Doom franchise that claimed to have a stronger focus on melee combat. However, I spent most of my time mowing down enemies with guns and other projectile weapons, so *shrug*. In indie games, we had Despelote, a narrative adventure game that takes place in Ecuador in the year 2002. I have a feeling this would be a hidden gem if I had played it, alas, it gets a spot in this section; we should all probably play it.
This was a big month for ports and DLC, first up is Capcom Fighting Collection 2, notable for containing two Capcom vs. SNK titles, and two Power Stone titles. Next, also from Capcom, we got Onimusha 2: Samurai’s Destiny Remastered to help get us all hyped for the upcoming reboot of the franchise. In DLC, Star Wars Outlaws got its second big expansion, A Pirate’s Fortune; did you play it? I didn’t. The Chrono Trigger inspired Sea of Stars got an expansion called Throes of the Watchmaker; I should probably check this game out. Finally, in RPG releases, Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time came out on Switch but I waited until June to pick up the Switch 2 release; did you?
Our May game to avoid is Game of Thrones: Kingsroad, another predatory, free-to-play mobile game that also has a PC port. Like I discussed with DC: Dark Legion, this game features all of the things that make a F2P mobile game evil; micro transactions, time limits, heavy grinding, etc. If there’s anything positive to say about Kingsroad, I guess it’s nice that a “console level” game is available on a mobile device. However, I think we’re past the point of that being an impressive feat, what it actually means is that the game is expensive to make so you’re likely to get fleeced even harder than you normally would.
If you don’t feel like getting ripped off by greedy video game publishers, we can always go see what our dear readers have recommended! Jarathan kicks things off with 9 Kings, a Steam early access title that has recently “…received two big updates…to bring it super close to final release. It’s…this perfect…blend of roguelike elements as you build…plots on a 3X3 grid to try to win battles. At times it feels…too simple, but the interactions are well thought out and let you totally break the game, should you so desire…“. Lamb Dance Revolution and Toothpic Monsoon recommend Cauldron, a very fun mini-game collection where you play the role of a witch who is trying to form a party that can fight off some monsters.
Brakeman recommends Monster Train 2, a turn-based deck builder that he seems to playing every single, god damn time I turn on my Switch and see his gameplay activity. Reader Blip recommends Poco a “…surreal adventure starring the world’s smallest clown, who has been exiled from the roving clown city to the world below and must find his way back. It makes use of CGI characters on hand-painted backgrounds, and it is incredibly charming (with a great soundtrack, too)“. Finally, your very talented and cool author, Andy Tuttle, recommends to a T, the latest game from Keita Takahashi, the creator of Katamari Damacy. In this quirky game, players take on the role of a young student who is unable to lower their arms, keeping them in a perpetual T-Pose. This makes everyday tasks, like putting on clothes, eating breakfast, and brushing your teeth incredibly difficult (and hilarious to watch). With a bizarre plot involving aliens and other oddball characters, to a T is a great diversion from some of the more serious games that came out in 2025 (plus, my daughter loves it and she is way cooler than me).
June:
- Best – Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster, Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition, Death Stranding 2: On the Beach, Deltarune, Dune: Awakening, Mario Kart World, Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour, Persona 5: The Phantom X, Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army, Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma, Switch 2 (console), Yakuza 0: Director’s Cut
- Avoid – MindsEye
- Hidden Gem – Date Everything! (Recommended by Colonel Mustard)
Our top game for June is also the game I put the most hours into this year (nearly 100), Hideo Kojima’s latest epic, Death Stranding 2: On the Beach. After suffering a tragic loss, Sam Porter Bridges embarks on a mission to connect the continent of Australia to the Chiral Network, much in the same way that he connected North America. Along the way, Sam is joined by a familiar face, Fragile, who is now the head of an organization called Drawbridge. Climbing aboard her ship, the DHV Magellan, Sam, Fragile, returning character Heartman, and new comers Dollman, Tarman, Rain, and the mysterious Tomorrow, attempt to bring Australia online. With the same brilliant gameplay as the first Death Stranding, part 2 adds even more unique contraptions and expands & improves the combat. Yeah, the story is a bit bonkers and can be a little eye rolling at times, but you’d be hard pressed to find a more interesting game from 2025.
Let’s not kid ourselves, though. As great as Death Stranding 2 is, the big thing from June was the launch of the Switch 2, Nintendo’s follow-up to the wildly successful Switch. It was released alongside the highly anticipated Mario Kart World, the first “open world” Mario Kart game which features tracks built directly into an explorable world, letting you drive on highways and backroads in-between races as you head for the next starting line. The other big first party release from the big N was Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour, a glorified tech demo that should have been free but instead cost ten bucks (why did I highlight this?).
There were other Switch 2 launch titles to check out, particularly ports & remasters, including Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster, Cyberpunk 2077: Ultimate Edition, Deltarune, and Yakuza 0: Director’s Cut, while a brand new Rune Factory game was released, Guardians of Azuma. Speaking of interesting remasters, the action RPG Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army came out, a spin-off of the Shin Megami Tensei series, and was one of my favorite games of 2025. Two non-Switch 2 releases included the MMO Dune: Awakening which I hear is great but maybe a little boring. There was also another SMT spin-off released this month, Persona 5: The Phantom X, a mobile title that also came to PC that, yes, contains many of the predatory practices of a free-to-play game but is, like, fine, okay, because it’s from a property I like; DON’T JUDGE ME!
Our title to avoid for June is the abysmally received MindsEye, the open world “platform game” from former GTA overseer Leslie Benzies. Released in an unfinished, buggy state, MindsEye had all the feelings of a game that was both built on the blockchain and full of AI but it, surprisingly, had neither. The game was universally hated by critics who called it “relentlessly dull”, “a broken & boring mess”, and nowhere near as good as Grand Theft Auto. Benzies’ studio, Build a Rocket Boy, was soon met with massive layoffs. Benzies blamed the failed launch of MindsEye on internal and external “saboteurs”, who wanted the game to fail. He as promised that it will eventually re-launch in an ever better state, sometime in the future. Cool.
Instead of MindsEye, let’s all check out the game Date Everything!, as recommended by reader Colonel Mustard. He says it is “An extremely odd game, in which you receive technologically advanced glasses that show you the anthropomorphized spirit of dozens and dozens of your household objects. What are you going to do with this gaggle of inhabitants? Date them, of course! You can aim for love, friendship, or hate with these new acquaintances, and each of them has their own story. It’s strangely sweet for a game that is demurely horny and the characters can curse a blue streak. It’s also from a studio founded by voice actors, so they got everyone to be in this“.
Hey, look at that, six months down and six more to go! I hope I was able to steer you towards a few games that you might have missed out on or given you some good ideas on something to get for that gamer in your life this holiday season. I’ll be back tomorrow morning with a look at the titles released from July to December. Take care out there folks, play some good games, and try not to eat too many sweets. You know, that sugar on your tongue can lead to bad things…or really good things…
