Tag: thoughtful,
Best Valentine’s Day gifts for her: Thoughtful picks to up the romance
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Happy Valentine’s Day season, lovebirds. Here’s how to impress your wife, fiancé, girlfriend, or that cute girl in your building you’ve been flirting with for months:
1. Don’t get her that gaudy chocolate diamond necklace that jewelry stores are shoving down your throat.
That’s it, that’s the whole gift guide.
OK, maybe it’s not that easy, but finding a romantic Valentine’s Day gift that’s not a complete cliché doesn’t have to be hard. Why give her jewelry every year when she’s been complaining about how crappy her tablet is?
Real romance isn’t about the amount of money you spend or picking out the biggest bouquet of roses. It’s about showing that you pay attention to her complaints, know what she likes, and appreciate what she does for you by gifting her something that makes her life easier. If you’re doing long distance, for example, a gift that keeps communication a priority is a no-brainer. You know, that healthy relationship stuff.
From wine and beauty subscriptions to smart home devices to thoughtful personalized items, there’s an option for whatever type of lady you’ve got on your hands — even if that type is Picky as Hell.
Here are the best gift ideas for her this Valentine’s Day:
Skybound’s Clementine comic undoes the hopeful ending of Telltale’s The Walking Dead, but in a thoughtful way
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A conversation in the RPS Treehouse the other day reminded me that there is only one game I have ever completed for the first time and then finished again, all within the span of a week. That game was The Walking Dead: The Final Season.
Having played all three previous seasons of Telltale’s choose-your-own-zombie-apocalypse tearjerker (plus the 400 Days DLC and the Michonne spin-off), it’s no surprise that I was incredibly invested in Clementine’s story by The Final Season. I’m not a big kid person, typically, but you’d have to be beyond heartless not to love little Clem, wouldn’t you? Even though, by the time TFS rolls around, she’s grown into medium-sized Clem, and is a bit bloody scary to boot.
The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me review – A thoughtful, but janky dive into the fetishisation of serial killers
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The Devil in Me marks the fourth instalment in Supermassive Games’ The Dark Pictures Anthology, the finale of the anthology’s first season. You’d expect The Devil in Me to go out with some sort of bang, then, right? Sadly, this lacklustre dénouement lets itself down with performance issues, a severe lack of quality, and limited immersion (which is often essential to this series of games being as gripping as they are).
The Devil in Me follows the crew of Lonnit Entertainment as they receive an offer that they cannot refuse. As the creators of a true-crime series, the gang are looking for a season finale that’ll, hopefully, guarantee them even more time on the air. The subject for their final episode? America’s most prolific serial killer, H. H. Holmes. However, this crew hasn’t got a leg to stand on. That is, until, a mystery phone call kicks things off.
Granthem Du’Met, the supposed relative of a serial killer obsessive who has managed to build a faithful replication of H. H Holmes’ The World’s Fair Hotel, invites Lonnit Entertainment to see the peculiar landmark, writhing with grim history, for themselves. So, off they go, adhering to Du’Met’s strict, strange, rules in the hopes of ending their show on a high.
How this company used tech and thoughtful planning to onboard staff
Diligent exceeded its hiring targets for Ireland during the pandemic thanks to its interactive, tech-led onboarding experience for new recruits.
Read more: How this company used tech and thoughtful planning to onboard staff