You’ve been stuck on that boss for three hours. And the guide you found? Written in 2019.
Missing half the mechanics.
I’ve been there too.
Most gaming guides online are either outdated, vague, or written by people who barely finished the tutorial.
That’s why I built Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks (not) as a side project, but after grinding 400+ hours across ten different games.
We test every step. We re-record every video. We update every guide the second a patch drops.
You won’t get theory. You’ll get what works (right) now.
This article shows you exactly why this is your new go-to.
And how to use it without wasting time.
No fluff. No filler. Just clear help when you need it most.
Why Tgageeks Guides Actually Work
I’ve tried dozens of gaming guides. Most leave me staring at the screen, confused and frustrated. Not these.
Tgageeks is built by people who still play the game today. Not just once, but every week. They’re not paid to pretend.
They’re in the Discord. They’re grinding the same meta you are. That changes everything.
You know that moment when a guide says “just activate the resonance loop”? Yeah, no. Here, they say exactly what button to press, when to hold it, and what the UI looks like when it works. Step-by-step instructions.
With screenshots, yes, and sometimes short video clips (so) you don’t have to guess.
Most guides go stale the second a patch drops. Not here. When a new DLC hits or balance shifts break your build?
They update within 48 hours. I checked. Patch notes are cross-referenced.
Changes are highlighted. No more scrolling through outdated comments trying to find the real answer.
And if something’s unclear? You comment. They read it.
They fix it. Last month, three readers asked why the stealth path in Chapter 7 wasn’t working. Turns out a bug broke it.
Guide got updated that day. It’s not static. It’s alive.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks isn’t about sounding smart. It’s about getting you back into the fight faster.
Some sites treat guides like Wikipedia entries. Dry. Distant.
This feels like a friend leaning over your shoulder saying, “Watch this.”
You ever follow a guide and still lose the boss?
Yeah. Me too. That’s why I stopped using the others.
The difference isn’t polish. It’s presence. They’re in the game, not just writing about it.
That’s rare.
That’s why it works.
Our Guides Aren’t Just Tips. They’re Playbooks
I write guides because I’ve wasted hours on bad ones. You know the kind: vague, outdated, or written by someone who never actually beat the boss.
Complete Walkthroughs mean no guessing. Take Baldur’s Gate 3. I walk you through every main quest decision, every side quest that affects romance or endings, and yes.
Where to find that damn Moon Moth wing you missed in Act 1. Not just “go here.” I tell you why it matters.
Character builds? I test them. Not theorycraft.
Real playtime. In Diablo IV, I ran five different Necro variants for 40+ hours each. In Cyberpunk 2077, I built a netrunner who could solo Arasaka Tower without stealth.
If it doesn’t hold up past level 50, it doesn’t make the guide.
Boss fights aren’t puzzles you solve once. They’re patterns you learn. My Elden Ring Malenia guide breaks down her third phase frame-by-frame.
Not “dodge when she glows.” It’s “she winds up for the red slash at 3.2 seconds (roll) left then sprint forward.”
Resource farming routes? I time them. If a guide says “farm here for 20 minutes,” I verify it.
Read them.)
Some spots are dead after patch 1.8. Others got buffed so hard they’re stupidly fast now. (Patch notes matter.
You want fast answers? Fine. But if you want to own a game (not) just finish it.
You need more than shortcuts.
That’s why I keep Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks grounded in what actually works. Not hype. Not assumptions.
And if you’re wondering whether that new mechanic in Starfield is worth learning? Check the Gaming updates tgageeks page. I update it same-day.
No fluff. No filler. Just what you need to play smarter.
Find Your Guide. Fast

I used to waste twenty minutes hunting for a single boss plan.
Then I learned how the site actually works.
Start with the search bar. Not the menu. Not the homepage banners.
The search bar. Type what you’re actually looking for. Like “Starfield ship building guide”.
Or “Lies of P Laxasia boss fight”. Don’t say “how do I beat”. Just name the thing.
The site knows.
Game Hubs are your second best friend. They’re not hidden. They’re right in the main nav.
Each one is a clean, clutter-free section for one game (all) guides, all updates, no scrolling past three unrelated articles.
Categories and tags? They’re not decoration. Click “Build” if you want character setups.
Click “Walkthrough” if you’re stuck on Act 2. Click “Collectible” when you’re missing that damn Starfield helmet again.
Pro tip: Bookmark your go-to Game Hub. I keep Starfield and Lies of P pinned in my browser. New guides drop fast.
And they always land first in the Hub.
You don’t need to read every headline. You don’t need to sign up for email alerts (unless you want them). You just need to know where to click (and) stop overthinking it.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks aren’t buried. They’re organized. And if you want daily updates on what’s new across dozens of games?
That’s where Tgageeks Gaming News comes in. I check it every morning. You’ll probably do the same after your first five-second search works.
Stop Wasting Time on Broken Game Guides
I’ve been there. Staring at a boss for two hours. Reading three different walkthroughs that contradict each other.
Closing the tab in frustration.
You didn’t sign up for that.
You signed up to play. To win. To feel progress (not) confusion.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks fixes this. Not with vague tips or copy-pasted forum posts. With real guides.
Written by people who beat the game this week. Updated when patches drop.
Think about it. That character build you’re stuck on? It’s there.
That hidden quest you missed? Solved. That RNG boss that keeps killing you?
There’s a pattern. And it’s spelled out.
No more guessing. No more tabs open, no more “why did this work for them but not me?”
You know exactly which game is giving you trouble right now.
So why wait?
Open the search bar. Type in that game’s name. Hit enter.
See how fast the answer shows up.
You’ll get clarity in under ten seconds.
That’s not luck. That’s what happens when every guide is tested, trimmed, and kept current.
Your next win starts with one search.
Do it now.
