I keep a small habit of building single-purpose sites for the games my nephew and his friends actually play. Nothing ambitious — usually a codes list, a calculator or two, and whatever else saves a kid from digging through a dozen ad-choked wikis. Here's this round's three, in case the pattern is useful to anyone doing the same.
A fishing-codes tracker
The first, Be a Fish Bait, came out of a Roblox fishing game where the promo codes rotate constantly and most listing pages sit weeks out of date. It's a codes page plus a small reroll-odds calculator, kept deliberately light so it loads fast on a phone.
A dinosaur-park guide
My Dino Park is the dino-collection one. The loop is basically hatch, grow, sell, reinvest, so I bolted on a payback calculator that estimates how long a given dino takes to earn back its cost. That's the question everyone asks in chat anyway.
An Ice Tycoon 2 hub
The newest, over at icetycoon2.com, covers a tycoon game that's all about optimizing a production line. I leaned into interactive tools rather than static text here — a cost-per-upgrade helper and a codes list I re-check against the game most days.
None of these try to be encyclopedias. One game, one page, a working tool, then get out of the way. If you build small niche sites too, I'd honestly rather trade notes on keeping data fresh than read another "10 best" listicle.
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