About

About the author

David keeps notes on games that reward patience.

David Game Blog began as a private notebook: a place to write down small discoveries from nonograms, word chains, sudoku variants, browser puzzle games, and quiet strategy games that can be played without pressure.

David is not chasing high scores or loud releases. He is interested in the kind of games that make you slow down, notice patterns, test a small idea, and leave the session a little sharper than when you started.

David at his desk with logic puzzle notes
Most articles start as a few pencil notes beside a puzzle grid, then turn into practical guides for calmer play.

The short story

David grew up with puzzle books on train rides, word games at family tables, and the satisfying scratch of pencil marks in the margins. Later, browser games and mobile logic apps became the same ritual in a new form: ten quiet minutes between tasks, one careful solve before bed, a small challenge without noise.

What he writes about

  • Logic games that are easy to start and worth returning to.
  • Word puzzles, nonograms, sudoku-style challenges, and puzzle books.
  • Beginner-friendly strategies that make games feel less intimidating.
  • Calm recommendations for players who prefer focus over frenzy.

Editorial style

The goal is simple: clear advice, honest recommendations, and practical steps. Articles are written for regular players who want better puzzle habits, not for speedrunners or experts only.

If a game teaches pattern recognition, memory, planning, or language play in a pleasant way, it belongs in David’s notebook.