You’ve spent more time hunting for a working guide than actually playing the game.
I know. I’ve been there too.
That wiki page? Last updated in 2021. That YouTube video?
Full of ads and wrong info. That forum post? Someone’s guess dressed up as fact.
None of it helps you beat the boss or open up the secret ending.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks is different.
It’s built by people who play the games. Not just watch them or write about them from a distance.
Every guide is tested. Every step verified. No filler.
No fluff.
You want to know exactly why this is the only collection you’ll ever need.
I’ll show you (in) plain terms. How it solves what every other resource gets wrong.
No hype. No jargon. Just guides that work.
What Makes Tgageeks Guides a Cut Above the Rest?
I’ve wasted hours on wikis that haven’t been touched since 2019.
You have too.
Tgageeks is different.
Every guide is written by someone who’s beaten the game. Not once, but twice, usually on hard mode, while muttering curses at a boss fight.
That matters. Because if you’re mid-battle and your screen says “Press X to parry,” but X actually blocks, you’re dead. Not “oops.” Dead.
We update for every patch. Every DLC drop. Every time some random streamer finds a glitch that lets you skip the final boss (yes, that happened in Starfield last month).
User-edited wikis? They get stale. Or worse (edited) by someone who misread the manual.
Our layouts are clean. No pop-ups. No “click here to continue” nonsense.
Just headers, screenshots, and bullet points you can scan in under three seconds.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks is how I find what works. Not what sounds right in a forum post.
We cover AAA messes like Cyberpunk 2077 (post-2.0, thank god) and weird indie things like Tunic or Eastshade.
If it has a jump button or a dialogue tree, we’ve mapped it.
Some sites treat guides like Wikipedia entries.
We treat them like cheat sheets you’d hand to a friend while they’re playing.
Pro tip: Ctrl+F “boss weak point” before the third act.
It saves lives.
Most guides assume you’ll read them all first.
We assume you’re already in the fight (and) just need the one line that stops you from dying again.
That’s why I trust it.
And why you should too.
No fluff. No filler. Just what you need.
When you need it.
Walkthroughs, Trophies, Builds: Which Guide Do You Actually Need?
I’ve written hundreds of guides. Not because I love typing. Because players kept asking the same thing: Where do I go next?
Main Story Walkthroughs are for when you just want to finish the damn story. No spoilers. No rabbit holes.
Just clear steps. Like “Talk to the bartender in Act 2, then head left down the alley.” I wrote one for Baldur’s Gate 3 that skips companion banter unless it triggers a quest. You’re welcome.
You ever get stuck on a boss and rage-quit? Yeah. That’s why those walkthroughs exist.
Then there’s the opposite energy: Completionist & Trophy Guides. These are obsessive. They list every hidden chest behind a waterfall in Horizon Forbidden West, every dialogue choice that unlocks the “Silent Observer” trophy in Ghost of Tsushima.
I once spent two days mapping elevator sequences in Returnal just so someone could get the platinum.
You can read more about this in Gaming Updates Tgageeks.
Does that sound excessive? Maybe. But if you’re hunting trophies, you’re already past “maybe.”
Builds & Plan Guides? Those are for when you stop playing the game and start fighting the game. Like the Helldivers 2 loadout guide that proves stacking “Roughneck” with “Heavy Weapons Expert” lets you solo the Leviathan (if) you know when to pop your stim.
(Pro tip: Do it after the third leg collapses.)
These aren’t theorycraft. They’re tested. I break them in co-op lobbies.
I lose on purpose to verify drop rates.
Some people think guides ruin games. I think bad guides do. Vague ones.
Outdated ones. Ones that say “just try different things.”
No. You want exact steps. Exact locations.
Exact timing.
That’s what we do.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks isn’t about fluff or filler. It’s about giving you what works. Today.
You don’t need all three guide types at once. You need the right one (right) now. So pick.
And go play.
Built with the Community: Not Just Another Set of Guides

These aren’t PDFs you download and forget.
I write them. Then I step back.
The real work starts when you show up in the comments.
That’s where guides stop being static and start breathing.
You ask questions I didn’t think of. You spot typos. You say “this doesn’t work on PS5” or “try holding L2 instead.” (Which, by the way.
Yes, that does fix it.)
I read every comment. Every one.
Not just to reply. But to rewrite.
If three people say the jump timing in Level 4 is off, I retest it. I film it again. I change the frame count.
That’s how the Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks stay accurate.
It’s not about ego. It’s about usefulness.
A guide that looks perfect on paper fails if it doesn’t match what actually happens on your screen.
So I treat the comments like a live QA team. Because they are.
Some folks send emails. Others post screenshots. A few even record short clips showing exactly where things break.
That feedback goes straight into the next revision.
No gatekeeping. No “that’s not how we do it here.”
Just fixes. Fast.
Want to see how this plays out in real time? read more about how recent player reports reshaped the boss-rush tutorial.
This isn’t collaboration theater.
It’s how you get a guide that works. Not just one that reads well.
And honestly? It’s the only way I’d trust it myself.
Find Your Guide in 3 Seconds. Not 3 Minutes
I type what I need. Hit enter. Done.
The search bar is the only thing you’ll ever need to touch.
It finds guides by game title, genre, or type (like) walkthrough or collectible. Not “plan” or “tips”. Actual words you’d say out loud.
Try “Cyberpunk 2077 hidden endings”. It shows up. Instantly.
You don’t scroll. You don’t guess. You don’t click through five layers of menus.
Same for “Stardew Valley museum checklist”. Or “Elden Ring boss weak points”.
No filters to toggle first. No categories to unfold. Just results.
Clean and exact.
That’s why I skip every other guide site.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks? Yeah, that’s the tagline. But it’s also how fast it works.
Want more updates on what’s new? Check out Tgageeks Gaming News
Stop Wasting Time on Broken Guides
I’ve been there. Staring at a boss I can’t beat. Refreshing five different sites.
Copying wrong commands. Getting angrier.
You don’t need ten sources. You need one that works.
Gaming Tutorials Tgageeks is that source. Real players wrote them. Real players test them.
Real players update them (every) week.
No fluff. No guesswork. Just the exact steps you need, right now.
That guide you’re hunting for? It’s already here.
You know the feeling when a tutorial fails (and) you lose thirty minutes, or worse, your streak.
This isn’t another dead link. This is the fix.
Your next in-game challenge is waiting.
Use the search bar above to find the guide for your current game and get back to what matters. Playing.
