Poll: So, Will You Be Getting Pokémon Pokopia?

Go on, tell us.

Pokémon Pokopia launched exclusively for the Switch 2 this week, and if you haven’t already heard about this new relaxing life-simulation, it’s been getting quite a lot of praise.

The game has already shot to the top of Metacritic as one of the highest-rated Pokémon games of all time, and here in our review on Nintendo Life, we mentioned how it was the freshest Pokémon experience in a long time, bursting at the seams with charm and content that rewards both curiosity and creativity.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Super Mario Run Gets A Super Mario Bros. Wonder Event

Celebrating the Switch 2 Edition + Meetup in Bellabel Park.

Super Mario Bros. Wonder‘s Switch 2 Edition and “Meetup in Bellabel Park” DLC is out later this month, and to celebrate its launch, Nintendo’s mobile runner Super Mario Run is hosting a special event.

This event, taking place between now and 3rd April 2026, gives players the opportunity to get special in-game statues inspired by Meetup in Bellabel Park, which you can then decorate your kingdom with.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Magic: The Gathering’s TMNT Turtle Power Deck is Amazing, Here’s Why I Love It

Magic: The Gathering’s crossovers get harder to predict, and the second set of the year takes us back to New York City – not for Spider-Man, but for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

Unlike the ill-fated Marvel set from last year, there’s a single Commander precon here, and while we may not have been sure what to expect before launch, it turns out it’s actually pretty great (with the caveat that you should be looking to find it at MSRP or lower).

Here’s why Turtle Power is worth picking up, whether you’re a new player or you’re just looking for some great new cards.

What Makes A Good Precon in Magic?

There are a few key considerations when picking up any deck. What does the deck intend to do as its playstyle, and does it execute on that vision? Are there any desirable reprints? Are there new cards that you’d want to use elsewhere?

In all of those areas, Turtle Power does a pretty good job. We’ll comment on how fun it is to play (and the myriad ways to do so) shortly, but for now, there are some decent reprints here.

Naturally, the value will drop as soon as players have picked up Turtle Power, but Fabled Passage, Wave Goodbye, Assassin’s Trophy, Vigor, and Steelbane Hydra are cards that would have been pricey had they not been included here.

For new cards, Continue is an awesome low-cost recursion instant that brings you four creatures back from the graveyard following a board wipe, while Krang, the All-Powerful, gets you double draw triggers and counters.

All in all, there’s plenty of value here in both new cards and reprints, but the real appeal is in how the deck plays.

Swappin’ Shells

Commander Decks have multiple Legendary creatures inside, if you want to swap out your leading favorite for someone else, but Turtle Power goes a step further.

There are six borderless foil cards that cover the Turtles individually, Splinter, and then Heroes in a Half Shell as the team comes together. That means you can swap them around as you see fit, but there are plenty of other Legendary Creatures to use as a Commander, too.

That means you can rotate elements of the deck to fit your playstyle, or try out new cards to find some synergies, while the Partner mechanic lets you play a pair of Commanders.

That’s a LOT of potential combinations (29 possible Commanders in total). Baxter, Fly in the Ointment gives cards with tokens flying, for example, and we can see that being useful in all manner of decks, while Shredder’s ability to slash life totals makes him ideal for ‘Group Slug’ decks.

There’s so much modularity here that with something like the Starter Collection from Foundations, you could use this as a deckbuilding tool that lets you swap in as few or as many cards as you feel comfortable with.

It doesn’t hurt that the mana base here is strong – like, really strong. City of Brass will take the plaudits for being an otherwise expensive card, but there are plenty of land options, including bond lands.

You could, if you have the collection for it, potentially make a couple of decks from the Turtle Power deck – at a major drop from the Avatar set’s $109.99 Commander Bundle.

Lack of Turtle Power?

The two drawbacks to the Turtle Power precon are its price of $69.99, which is a markup over what you’d have paid for the (excellent) Lorwyn precons), and the fact that it’s perhaps less powerful than other decks we’ve had in recent months.

Its real strength is in being able to swap out components as you see fit, but it’s hard not to feel like it’s perhaps not quite as cohesive as a five-color deck as Lorwyn’s Dance of the Elements.

Have you ordered Turtle Power? Will you consider picking it up? Let us know in the comments.

Xbox Is Bringing Another Game To Switch 2 Later This Month

Compulsion’s award-winning title ‘South of Midnight’.

It’s been a busy week for Xbox, but it’s not done just yet! Following the announcement of its next generation console, it’s now locked in a release date for the Switch 2 version of the “award-winning” title South of Midnight.

This third-person action-adventure title by Compulsion Games was announced for Nintendo’s new hybrid platform (and the PlayStation 5) last December, and the latest trailer confirms it will be releasing later this month on 31st March 2026.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

Slay the Spire 2 Early Access Review So Far

On its Early Access launch day, before I’d unlocked anything, I was struck by how much Slay the Spire 2 felt more like a remake of the original Slay the Spire than a sequel. The tutorial didn’t tell me – someone with over 1,000 hours in the original – anything I didn’t already know. The map where you choose your path and whether to aim for riskier battles with higher rewards or potentially lower-stakes encounters (which can still turn wild on you) is exactly the same, and the turn-based combat follows basically all the old rules of how you spend your allotted energy points to play cards that build up your armor and hack away at the enemy’s defenses and health until one side or the other is dead.

That’s not a bad thing when your starting point is one of the all-time greats – just a few months ago I lavished praise on another deckbuilding roguelike sequel, Monster Train 2, for a similar approach. And as I’ve progressed and unlocked some of the new content over the first eight or so hours of runs, this follow-up has come more into its own: Two entirely new characters – the Regent and the Necrobinder – join three revamped ones, and loads of new enemies, bosses, artifacts, and random events make Slay the Spire 2 feel worthy of being called a sequel, even if it’s extremely familiar in its opening hours. It also has a new art style that’s very quickly won me over with its larger characters and less subtle animations (including more elaborate enemy deaths) that make it a bit more lively even though everybody’s holding still most of the time.

Since we’re still so early, I’ve been concentrating my progression efforts on my old favorite character, the Defect. This faulty robot is a lot chunkier-looking this time, but his orb-summoning and evoking mechanic is carried over almost unchanged. However, balance is different enough that as someone who routinely blasts through Daily Climbs in the original, I’ve only managed to win a couple of runs thus far – my first, as the Ironclad (which is probably kinda rigged to make us feel powerful), and one more since as the Defect. Part of that is that there are quite a lot of new cards to unlock that will certainly make things a bit easier than when I’m working with just the basics, and part of it is me cockily charging head-first into battles with elites and bosses I’ve never seen before and getting my butt handed to me as a learning experience. But it’s not like I go into a roguelike of any type expecting to win runs early on – losing and then improving is a big part of the fun.

One area developer Mega Crit has definitely gotten a little more inventive is with special events, some of which can give you a sort of quest that can span across acts (think a more formal version of the first game’s Red Mask interaction). I’ve gotten a map in Act 1 that led me to a huge treasure pile in Act 2, and a key in one act that opens a chest in the next. There’s also a bird egg that must be hatched at a rest site (so it comes at the opportunity cost of not healing yourself or upgrading a card). Those are represented by unplayable cards until their quest is resolved, so there’s at least a minor consequence to carrying them with you because they take up space in your deck and hand that could’ve gone to something useful in the moment.

I’ve also seen a bit more willingness to let us tweak how cards work beyond simply upgrading them. A few new modifiers like letting you re-use a card, making defense cards exhaust but gain +1 after use, giving you an extra energy the first time you play a card, making a card retainable, etc. – these all have the potential to make builds a lot more flexible than in the original.

The big feature that truly sets Slay the Spire 2 apart is the up-to-four-player co-op mode, and in the couple of runs I’ve done with others, it’s been more than a little chaotic. Within each turn of combat, it’s a real-time free-for-all where everybody plays their cards at once, so if you’re not coordinating your attacks over voice chat it gets crazy extremely quickly as the cards stack up and wait their turns for their animations to play out. If you plan on getting anywhere as a team you’ll definitely want to make sure you’re working together, because Slay the Spire 2 balances out the presence of multiple players by dramatically increasing enemy hitpoints (and their attacks hit everybody at once), so you’ll need to focus fire to take out priority targets quickly. Given there’s no matchmaking to find random people to play with, though, it’s safe to say you’ll be in some form of communication with your teammates.

So far the new co-op mode has been more than a little chaotic.

Things are made a little more forgiving in co-op in that downed players are automatically revived to 1HP after a battle and you can use your rest site action to heal a teammate instead of yourself. You also get the same number of random artifacts as you have players each time they’re handed out, which lets you choose the best fit for each of your builds (with any disputes settled randomly). I can see that giving you a major leg up over simply taking whatever pops out of a chest. I’ve also gotten a few co-op-specific cards that allow me to boost my teammates, such as giving them a random card to play in combat.

Of course, I expect that the difficulty will ramp up pretty dramatically as well, and require even more planning of your order of operations than you have to do alone. It’s deliberately designed to make you and your teammates hash things out in conversation: You can’t see a teammate’s entire hand, but they can mouse over one card at a time and it’ll be displayed over their character’s head so you can see what they’re talking about. I also love how you can draw on the map now, plotting out where you’re going or just doodling. (That works in single-player as well, if you want to leave yourself a note.)

I will say that it would be great if Mega Crit could find a better solution for what happens when someone in your party has to bail mid-run, because right now that person’s character just stops and you have to abandon your game with nothing to show for it. To be fair, a typical run isn’t going to go more than an hour and everybody should know what they’re getting into before setting out on a group adventure, but things happen.

After just one day of playing there’s certainly a lot more here to cover, especially since it at least appears to be largely “complete” in terms of how much content is here (though who knows how much bigger Mega Crit plans to make it before 1.0). Outside of the balance changes we’ve been told to expect, the only real indication that this is an early access game is the goofy MS Paint-style placeholder art you’ll see on a handful of cards and in the progression tree that serves up bite-sized bits of lore as you unlock new cards, potions, and artifacts.

So how long will it take me to wrap up this review? Hard to say: this isn’t really the kind of game that you ever fully “beat,” and if the first one is any indication I’ll likely still be doing the randomized Daily Climbs in Slay the Spire 2 well into the 2030s. But I expect I’ll be able to form some coherent thoughts about its new ideas within the next week or so of bashing my head against its various bosses and figuring out how to generate the star currency the Regent uses to cast his spells and how to manage the Necrobinder’s pet skeleton hand. So check back next week for more impressions, and tell us how your early runs have been going so far in the comments.

Pokémon TCG’s 151 Cards Continue to Skyrocket in Value After 30th Anniversary Celebrations

This week has been historic for Pokémon, as we celebrated the franchise’s 30th anniversary with a Pokémon Presents that gave us our first look at Pokémon Winds and Waves.

With the reveal of a new region based and our first look at the Generation 10 starters, we bid a fond farewell to Paldea.

This ‘see you later’ to Generation 9 has definitely been reflected in the Pokémon TCG, as Scarlet & Violet – 151 has become the market’s hottest focal point this week.

Using data from TCGPlayer, the gold standard for secondary market pricing, we’ve analyzed the biggest movers of the week to see which cards are capturing the anniversary hype.

7. N’s PP Up – 262/217

  • Weekly Spike: +$6
  • Current Market Price: $14
  • Investment Velocity: 75% Increase

Perhaps not a card you’d expect to see spiking, it hardly follows the typical chase cards we’ve come to expect. This Trainer-Item card is from the Pokémon TCG Scarlet & Violet – Journey Together set (153/159). This week, it’s jumped from $8 up to $14 thanks to its place in the competitive meta right now.

This card is an energy acceleration tool within “N’s Pokémon” decks, which allows a player to attach a basic energy card from their discard pile to one of their benched N’s Pokémon. Notably, its synergy with N’s Zoroark ex’s “Trade” ability in Ascended Heroes and “Night Joker” attack is perfect for setting up attackers quickly. A 75% spike for a common card is a great investment opportunity, but it’s not the time to be buying, unless you’re a competitive player.

6. Team Magma’s Groudon-EX – 15/34

  • Weekly Spike: +$18
  • Current Market Price: $492
  • Investment Velocity: 3.8% Increase

The awesome Team Magma’s Groudon-EX (#15/34) was released in the XY Double Crisis special mini-set in March 2015. Can you believe that was 11 years ago? It was $130 at the beginning of 2025, jumping to $221.50 in March 2025. This week, it’s up from $474 to $492. It may only be a 3.8% spike, but that’s still a $18 profit.

5. Team Rocket’s Mewtwo ex – 231/182

  • Weekly Spike: +$40
  • Current Market Price: $471.73
  • Investment Velocity: 9.3%

This is just straight up one of the coolest cards in the Destined Rivals set. With the menacing Giovanni in the foreground, and the awesome Mewtwo softly pulsing with Psychic energy in the background, looming over you, it has quickly become the most valuable modern Mewtwo ever printed.

Destined Rivals is no stranger to cards breaching triple digits, but the Secret Rare Illustration Team Rocket’s Mewtwo ex remains on top. This week, it’s going for $471.73, a 9.3% increase from $430 last week.

4. Charizard ex – 199/165

  • Weekly Spike: +$94.68
  • Current Market Price: $443.20
  • Investment Velocity: 27.2% Increase

There’s no shortage of iconic Charizard cards, and this one from Scarlet & Violet 151 is the start of the spikes from this set. This gorgeous Secret Rare is actually part of an evolution story – Charizard soars over the canyon where the Scarlet & Violet—151 Secret Rare Charmander and Charmeleon are trapped.

It’s no wonder this ‘Zard card is highly sought after by collectors. This week it reached a high of $443.2, compared to $348.52 last week. That’s nearly $100 more, in nearly a week!

3. Blastoise ex – 200/165

  • Weekly Spike: +$66.28
  • Current Market Price: $216.51
  • Investment Velocity: 44.1% Increase

Charizard isn’t the only card from Scarlet & Violet – 151 making waves this week. The market for the “Big Kanto Three” remains incredibly volatile as collectors chase the set’s top-end Special Illustration Rares.

A Blastoise ex (200/165) card recently sold on TCGPlayer for a whopping $216.51, a dramatic jump from its $150.23 price point earlier this week. This sudden surge represents a 44% leap in value in just a few days, perhaps helped by the fact Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen made a triumphant return this week. Blastoise is my First Partner Pokemon of choice, so I’ll be looking to secure this card for sure.

2. Venusaur ex – 198/165

  • Weekly Spike: +$17.59
  • Current Market Price: $145.42
  • Investment Velocity: 77.23% Increase

I couldn’t mention Charizard and Blastoise and not bring up Venusaur ex (198/165)—the objective best Kanto First Partner, right? Fortunately, the data backs it up: Venusaur is also riding the 151 wave this week, albeit with a slightly more “steady” climb than its Kantonian counterparts.

A Lightly Played holofoil is sitting at $104.78 this week, crossing that psychological $100 barrier after being valued at $87.19 just last week. While it isn’t quite as explosive as the other two, it’s my personal favourite of the three. You’re looking at $145.42 for a mint card, however.

1. Mega Gengar ex – 284/217

  • Weekly Spike: +$58.75
  • Current Market Price: $979.65
  • Investment Velocity: 6.4% Increase

This Special Illustration Rare is the biggest chase card in Ascended Heroes. While much of the set saw a temporary price dip after the recent Elite Trainer Box restocks, Mega Gengar ex (284/217) has had an impressive rebound this week.

Currently moving at a market rate of $979.65 – up from $920.90 last week, this card is resisting the typical price drop that follows a major supply influx. With these restocks selling out instantly and the next major expansion, Perfect Order, looming at the end of this month (March 27, 2026), it’s anyone’s guess where cards from this set go from now. Will Mega Gengar ex cross that $1000 price point next week?

Sara Heritage is a freelance contributor to IGN.

Nintendo Is Suing The U.S. Government Over Trump’s Tariffs

It’s seeking refunds plus interest.

Nintendo of America is suing the U.S. government, including the Department of Treasury, Department of Homeland Security, and US Customs & Border Protection, over the tariffs implemented in 2025 via executive order from President Donald Trump.

As reported by Aftermath, the complaint concerns the “initiation and administration of unlawful trade measures that have, to date, resulted in the collection of more than $200 billion in tariffs on imports from nearly all countries”.

Read the full article on nintendolife.com

The Black Spades Preview is Available Today for Xbox Insiders!

The Black Spades Preview is Available Today for Xbox Insiders!

Black Spades

Are you ready to play Spades? We’re excited to partner with Konsole Kingz and invite all Xbox Insiders on Xbox Series X|S to join the Black Spades Preview starting today. Join to give the team your feedback to help them refine and polish the game before release. This preview is an integral part of the development process, and we are delighted that you’ll be a part of it. Space is limited — reserve your spot today!

About the Game:

Yep, that’s right! Spades the way your friends and family play at home, college, reunions, and holiday get-togethers! The only spades game with Jokers, Deuces, and Reneg calling!

Black Spades was created for spades players on all levels. From the beginner playing at home to the expert playing on the go, our game was designed to get you straight to the action with no gimmicks.

Show off your spades skills to friends and family, then share them with the world!

How to Participate:

  1. Sign-in on your Xbox Series X|S console and launch the Xbox Insider Hub app (or install the Xbox Insider Hub from the Store first if necessary)
  2. Navigate to Previews > Black Spades
  3. Select Join
  4. Wait for the registration to complete and be directed to the Store and install Black Spades da Demo!

NOTE: Space is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis.

NOTE: This playtest is only available on Xbox Series X|S consoles.

How to Provide Feedback:

If you experience any issues while playing Black Spades, don’t forget to use “Report a problem” so we can investigate:

  • Hold down the home button on your Xbox controller.
  • Select Report a problem.
  • Select the Games category and Black Spades da Demo! subcategory.
  • Fill out the form with the appropriate details to help our investigation.

Other resources:

For more information: follow us on X/Twitter at @XboxInsider and this blog for announcements and more. And feel free to interact with the community on the Xbox Insider SubReddit.

The post The Black Spades Preview is Available Today for Xbox Insiders! appeared first on Xbox Wire.

WWE 2K26 Review So Far

If it’s Wrestlemania season, that means it’s time for a new WWE 2K game. 2K26 came in hot, a little too hot to get a comprehensive look at the entire thing before the “pay more to play early” period opened up today. But I’ve spent a good chunk of time running the ropes in this year’s ring, and so far it’s been a solid next chapter in what has been this series’ most impressive run to date. That said, with another milquetoast showcase mode and the growing presence of monetization wrapping itself around the experience like an anaconda vise, it’s starting to feel like the golden age for 2K wrestling games might be coming to an end.

2K26 hasn’t learned many new moves since last year, mostly just tweaking existing base mechanics. The biggest slam to the system is an adjustment to stamina, adding a condition called “winded” to superstars who run out. While winded, your stamina wheel turns from yellow to purple, and you can no longer run or use reversals until it empties and goes back to normal. This adds more risk-reward to all of the offensive and defensive actions you do in the ring that cost stamina.

It also creates a solution to the 2K series issue of how powerful the reversal system is (you are basically unstoppable if you’ve become the Tribal Chief of pressing one button on time, every time) by making it cost stamina to do and penalizing you for running your stamina into the red. However, it doesn’t address the problem of how the reversal prompts are unintuitive and sometimes at unpredictable points during a move’s animation, making picking the system up feel impossible without hours of ring time and muscle memory development. You win some, you lose some.

Other adjustments are nice to have but don’t change the flow or feel of matches significantly. Harkening back to the series’ pre-Visual Concepts days, collision physics have been changed slightly, so throws and bumps are less trapped in canned animation sequences and interact with objects around them. A body suplexed into the ropes will actually bounce off them in a more appropriately reactive way instead of attempting to clip through them. Throw an opponent onto the ring stairs, and they’ll properly crunch around their hulking metal block. Does this allow objects laying on the ground to do a significant amount more damage if you drop someone on them, an ever-present trope of professional wrestling of all forms? More testing is necessary, but it’s unclear right now.

Some adjustments are nice, but don’t change the flow of matches significantly.

Another blast from the past are the additional match types added in 2K26: I Quit, Dumpster, Inferno, and Three Stages of Hell. That last one is essentially a gauntlet match where you choose three different match stipulations and you wrestle through them, two-out-of-three falls style. The Dumpster match is functionally no different than the Casket or Ambulance matches, where you have to weaken opponents enough to shove them in a box they don’t want to be in. The Inferno match returns from the Smackdown vs Raw series with a more straight forward play path: Doing moves increases the temperature gauge, and once it’s at max, you must expose the enemy to the flames to win. This was cool, but also isn’t that special once the new car smell has burned away.

I Quit is arguably the best of these new options, basically elaborating on the submission match, but instead of the normal mashing minigame, players that are being forced to say I Quit must pass a series of checks hitting the right spots on a gauge enough times to continue on. These spots get smaller as you take more damage, and opponents can add blockers to make the task that much harder, which they can earn the same way they earn finishers. This is a really clever idea, just complex enough to be engaging and tactical without being too much to deal with.

I dabbled in The Island, the weird, Street Fighter World Tour-esque multiplayer hub world that lets players create their own wrestlers, participate in open world RPG-style quests while also competing with each other on leaderboards, and it’s at least a more coherent game mode out of the gate this time. It embraces the fantastical nature of last year’s version, leaning into mysterious powers of The Island of Relevancy, now being divided up by three different factions all fighting to gain its magical powers. This sort of pro wrestling RPG nonsense is something that I would be all over on paper, but the original Island’s poor writing and janky pacing put me off. This year at least seems to be attempting to address that. I’m not sure it’s a better written project yet, but it’s at least fully voiced and easy to navigate. I haven’t gotten deep enough to see just when the cold grip of monetization starts to strangle this mode into submission, but if it’s anything like last year’s, it will be early and often.

Battle Passes make their debut in 2K26, and they leave a lot to be desired. There is a lot to earn split between free and premium pass tracks. Many of the free rewards are arenas, superstars, championships, and cosmetics you would have otherwise earned a free currency to buy from an in-game store in previous games, while the premium track features a lot of MyFaction related goodies and a handful of extra wrestlers, with this first season themed around the stars of AAA. These replace the wrestler DLC drops of old, and I can see them being a frustrating replacement – not simply because it means you’ll need to grind matches in order to unlock things you’d just buy previously, but also because unlocking new tiers seems to take a lot of work. I spent around five hours between random exhibition matches, showcase mode, and The Island, and have only made it to tier four of 40. At the end of the track are unlockables, like what would have been the late Bray Wyatt’s last costume and a really cool move that I would have loved to give to a custom wrestler, but I fear I simply don’t have the endurance for that grind, or the patience to accept that I even have to.

Showcase suffers from most of the same problems these modes always have.

I’ve spent most of my time so far with this year’s Showcase, themed around the highlights and lowlights of CM Punk’s two-pronged WWE career. It suffers from most of the same problems that these modes always have, like its gaping holes in history that it has to ignore for corporate reasons, or the awkward ways it tries and fails to recreate major moments in real matches as gameplay moments. I’m a little bit more than halfway through it, so I won’t comment specifically on what’s absent or not until I see it all, though I can be confidently disappointed that his matches with Bryan Danielson won’t be among the playlist since he’s with a rival company these days.

The 10+ year gap he’s had in his career is already a spectre that really haunts this mode, as it makes the pickings for memorable moments to relive slim. They try to address this with a little kayfabe, Punk engaging in a little metanarrative between matches to use the “Slingshot Technology” that Showcase employs to meld matches and real footage as a sort of time machine. That allows him to both undo some losses in his own career, embody Bret Hart to prevent the Montreal Screwjob, and indulge himself in a bunch of “what if” dream matches. These definitely feel more like busy work than cool experiences, even though they are right in line with the toybox nature of wrestling games to begin with.

So far, WWE 2K26 is proving that this solid five-year run the series has been on was built on a great foundation. One that has barely had to change, but continues to in ways that are starting to hurt more than help. The smaller gameplay tweaks and match types are at best great and at worst irrelevant, and there are still large bugaboos that show no real sign of improvement, like the centerpiece Showcase mode. And some changes, like the addition of the battle pass, make growing your collection of cosmetics, moves, and wrestlers worse and more expensive. This isn’t a knockout blow for the series, but its certainly a threat to the champion. Hopefully, when I sink more time into other modes like MyRise and MyGM, they’re good enough to help rally this heavyweight to a win.

After trying Subtractive Runemixer, I can’t unsee the links between RPG element systems and colour theory

Subtractive Runemixer is a work-in-progress RPG by Starbage, recently released for free on Itch.io. I know about it because artist and writer Oma Keeling shared it on Bluesky. It’s a first-person RPGMaker production in you are a gloomy automaton called Caster, who is searching a labyrinth of religious icons and technology for another automaton who wants to kill you.

Read more