Taskmaster: Television’s most joyful celebration of silliness and lateral thinking has had a great 2023, with Taskmaster’s 16th season featuring a top crew of five contestants—Julian Clary, Lucy Beaumont, Sam Campbell, Susan Wokoma, and the eternally delightful Sue Perkins—suffering at the whims of host Greg Davies and mastermind . is that rare “reality competition” where failure and success are both equally satisfying to watch. Few things help me unwind after a long day of work like hanging out with people who are being both simultaneously very clever and very stupid in the service of completing bizarre tasks. (Bonus gratitude: British channel Dave’s continual devotion to uploading the series to YouTube for viewers in the States to keep up with.)McElroy Brothers gaming streams: As a long-time fan of and The Adventure Zone stars Justin, Travis, and Griffin McElroy, I’ve been delighted by the trio’s embrace of streaming over the last few months—and especially the they’ve decided to play through a couple of classic video games. Described as “Three boys, six thumbs, one heart,” the streams see the three brothers play through first Super Nintendo classic Super Mario World, and then Donkey Kong Country, with each brother having access to only one part of a shared controller. (Typically, Justin has movement, Griffin has jumping, and Travis controls special actions.) This is, as they frequently note, a remarkably bad way to play a video game, especially over the internet, and watching the three of them go through a series of highs, lows, and weed jokes—shout-out to The Hog—each week as they just barely manage to triumph in the space of their own self-appointed adversity is a periodic highlight.Arkham Horror: The Card Game: Although it’s been running for several years now, 2023 was the year I finally got, in a really serious way, into Fantasy Flight Games’ Arkham Horror: The Card Game, a significantly better (if also more expensive, at least in the aggregate) take on the same ideas explored in the old Lovecraft-inspired board game of the same name. Playing every week with one of my best friends, we’ve explored nightmarish small towns, asylums in the grip of madness, and the far reaches of space, all through a series of card game mechanics that encourages as much preparation before the game begins as in-the-moment decision making. Besides being a fantastic co-op experience, Arkham Horror: TCG remains endlessly impressive the deeper you get into it, managing to tell compelling horror stories without ever sacrificing the satisfaction that comes from building a really good deck to batter down the fish-faced horrors or tentacle-heavy monsters of the Mythos.