women
Women make up a huge chunk of the game-playing population, but it ain't always simple being a girl gamer.
10 Horror Video Games Loved by Women. AI-Generated.
Horror video games have increasingly become a space where female players find engaging narratives, strong characters, and immersive experiences. Here are ten horror games that are particularly favored by women, along with the virtues that make them appealing.
By Ninfa Galeano3 days ago in Gamers
Games for Cooking: Fun, Addictive Titles in 2026. AI-Generated.
Cooking games have come a long way since their humble beginnings. What once was a simple mini-game focused on chopping vegetables or stirring pots has now evolved into full-fledged interactive experiences. Modern games for cooking combine strategy, simulation, time management, and creative freedom, making them incredibly addictive for players of all ages.
By Micheal Turner10 days ago in Gamers
When Is a Move Final?
The Commitment Problem in Modern Chess Modern chess operates under a fractured commitment model that no longer aligns with how players think, how turns function in most games, or how chess itself is actually played across physical and digital formats. At the heart of the problem is that chess treats physical contact with a piece as binding commitment while simultaneously relying on a separate explicit action to end a player’s turn. This creates a logical contradiction: a move becomes final before the turn is over. In most turn-based games, interaction with game components is provisional until the player explicitly signals the end of their turn. Chess is an anomaly in this respect, and the inconsistency becomes increasingly visible in modern play.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Gamers
Ditch the Jersey: 6 Chic Ways to Rock Your School Colors Without Looking Basic
Aren’t you tired of wearing your school jersey to sports events? Jerseys are icons of school representation. However, this does not mean you always need to wear them to show school pride.
By Tiffany Youngabout a month ago in Gamers
The Boy Who Watched the Giant
I didn’t go for the stars. I went for my nephew. He’s eleven, wears his hair in messy curls, and talks about football like it’s a secret code only he and the ball understand. “You have to see how they move together, Tío,” he’d said, eyes wide. “It’s like they’re speaking without words.”
By KAMRAN AHMADabout a month ago in Gamers
The Night the Stadium Felt Like Home
I didn’t go for the spectacle. I went because I was lost. It was my first winter in a new country. The language felt like glass in my mouth, the streets unfamiliar, the silence in my apartment louder than any noise back home. I missed the rhythm of my old life—the market vendors who knew my name, the neighbors who waved from their windows, the comfort of being understood without speaking.
By KAMRAN AHMADabout a month ago in Gamers
A New Era of Boxing: How a Turkmen Pioneer Is Elevating the Sport
Boxing is a sport defined by discipline, endurance, and tradition. For decades, champions have been shaped through familiar training methods that emphasize strength, conditioning, and repetition. While these foundations remain essential, the modern era of sport increasingly demands innovation rooted in science and performance analysis. Within this evolving landscape, a Turkmen pioneer has emerged whose work is redefining how boxing talent is developed and refined.
By Abbasi Publisherabout a month ago in Gamers
Mother Simulator Game Review
Hello and welcome back to my pedestal of random games I play for review! Happy New Year and welcome 2026! Let’s start off the year with a game from 2018 – Mother Simulator. Don’t be surprised if I bring forth the train of simulators. I have missed out of that train from 2025, so I need to play catch up.
By Amelia Ruth Thompson2 months ago in Gamers
The Night the Gym Felt Like Church
I didn’t go for the basketball. I went because my nephew asked me to. He’s thirteen, wears his hair in messy curls, and talks about the game like it’s a secret language only he and the ball understand. “You have to see how they move together, Uncle,” he’d said, eyes wide. “It’s like they’re speaking without words.”
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Gamers
The Night the Future Felt Like Hope
I didn’t go to the store for inspiration. I went because I was out of coffee. It was a Tuesday in early March—gray, damp, the kind of morning that clings to your shoulders like a wet coat. I hadn’t slept. My mind was a tangle of unread messages, overdue bills, and the low hum of dread that had become my baseline. The grocery store was just a pit stop on the way to another day I wasn’t sure I could face.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Gamers
The Night the Arena Felt Like a Time Machine. AI-Generated.
I didn’t go to the library for answers. I went because it was the only place where silence wasn’t judged. It was the winter after my divorce. My apartment felt too loud with absence—echoes in the hallway, empty chairs at the table, the hum of a refrigerator that used to be background noise but now sounded like loneliness amplified. So every Tuesday at 2 p.m., I walked the three blocks to the public library, took the same seat by the window, and opened a book I never read.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Gamers
The Porch Light That Stayed On
I didn’t notice the porch light at first. It was just another fixture on a quiet street lined with oak trees and tired mailboxes. But every night at 9 p.m., without fail, it clicked on—even in rain, even in summer heat, even when no one was home.
By KAMRAN AHMAD2 months ago in Gamers









