Thanks for checking into it. I PMed you.
RadDevon
Here are the apps I used that I'm not seeing.
- FoodNoms for calorie counting
- Waking Up for guided meditation
- Finch for gamified general mental health
- Future for asynchronous virtual training
- Tripsy for travel tracking
- Organic Maps for offline mapping
- Transit for navigating most US cities via public transit
- Fastmail for personal email (Apple Mail for work email)
- 1Password for password management
- Elaho for browsing Gemini
- Tidal for music
- Vellum for cool backgrounds
- SwiftScan for scanning documents
- iPlum for a cheap business phone number
- Kagi Search to set the Kagi search engine as the default in Safari
- Parcel for package tracking
- Mona for Mastodon
And I'll second some others.
- Overcast
- Bookplayer
- Reeder
- AnyList
- Sleep Cycle
- Signal
- Obsidian
- Vinegar
- Noir
Yeah, come to think of it, I think this is a larger issue I have in life: I always have to be working toward a goal or else I feel guilty. I can see your point of view too though. If there's no beginning and end, there's no minimum amount of time you need to play. The goal is just to enjoy.
My perspective is basically the inverse: if there's no beginning and end, there's no maximum amount of time I need to play. 😅
I don't feel this way about open-world games because they do usually have an end and you can skip a lot of the open-world filler content. I get this anxiety about sandbox games. I hate it because I really enjoy games like Cities Skylines and I'd love to get into Dwarf Fortress, but I can't play them anymore because I could spend 1,000 hours in one of them and never finish. That open-endedness keeps me from playing.
The Elden Ring Tiger Electronics LCD game is pretty fun.