u/pointless_addition

Free games?

I have a 3S an Iv recently got back into playing on it and I had paid games like best saber and the walking dead but I can never seem to find any free games that look good! Can anyone suggest any that are actually good even if they don’t look it.

Thank you

reddit.com
u/pointless_addition — 20 hours ago

3,000 visitors. $2,370 in revenue. Here's the workflow that made my SEO actually connect to money.

I want to share something real because most SEO content talks about traffic like it's the finish line. It isn't.

Last month my site got 3,175 visitors and generated $2,370 in revenue. That's $0.75 per visitor and a 1.2% conversion rate. The session time averaged 1 minute 21 seconds, up nearly 40% from the month before. I'm sharing these numbers not to brag but because I spent a long time doing SEO without having any idea whether it was working. These numbers finally changed that.

The thing I had to understand first is that SEO results don't come from one thing. They come from four things working together in the right order and for most of the early part of my journey I was doing them in the wrong order.

The foundation is authority. A new domain has none and Google will not rank your content regardless of how good it is until your site has credibility. Credibility comes from backlinks, real sites referencing yours. The most accessible way to build that foundation early is directory submissions. SaaS directories, AI tool aggregators, startup listing platforms. Each one is a legitimate site with real domain authority pointing back to yours. I used this directory submission tool to handle submissions across 200+ directories in one go instead of manually tracking down and submitting to each one. It's not glamorous work but it is the foundation that makes everything else function. Once my backlink profile started filling in, Google's crawl frequency on my site increased noticeably and the content I was publishing started actually getting picked up.

Once that foundation existed I focused on content but with a different strategy than I had before. Google SEO and AI search are genuinely two different games now. Google evaluates keywords, page structure, technical performance, and backlinks. AI tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity scan the web for direct, clearly written answers to specific questions. If your content is a padded keyword-stuffed post that buries the actual answer deep in the article, AI search skips it. What gets cited in AI-generated responses is content that answers one question really well, leads with the direct answer, and reads like a knowledgeable person explaining something in plain language. I rebuilt my entire content approach around this format and used this SEO tool to handle keyword research and auto-publishing so I could maintain volume without writing every article from scratch. The combination of the right format and consistent output is what eventually got my content surfacing in AI-generated answers.

The step that embarrassed me most when I figured it out was indexing. I had been publishing content for months assuming Google was keeping up. Checked Search Console properly one day and found a significant backlog of articles that had never been indexed. For newer sites Google crawls on its own schedule and that schedule is slow, sometimes weeks between visits. Content that isn't indexed cannot rank and cannot be cited by AI search regardless of how well it's written. The fix is simple but most people don't make it a habit. Manually request indexing for every page you publish through Google Search Console and use IndexNow for Bing. I eventually automated this entirely with IndexerHub which connects directly to Google's Indexing API and submits new pages automatically the moment they go live. Pages that used to sit unindexed for three to four weeks started appearing in the index within hours.

The last piece was measurement and it completely changed how I made decisions. I was tracking traffic and feeling okay about the numbers but I had no idea which content was actually driving revenue. Some of my highest traffic pages were contributing almost nothing to paid signups. Some low traffic pages were converting really well. I had no visibility into this until I connected my analytics to my payment data through Faurya. It integrates directly with Stripe and shows you exactly which pages are driving paying users, not just visitors. Once I could see that clearly I stopped producing content that looked good in dashboards and started doubling down on the formats and topics that were actually converting.

That's the workflow. Authority first through directory submissions, then content built for both Google and AI search, then fast indexing so nothing sits in a queue, then revenue attribution so you know what's actually working. The $2,370 from 3,000 visitors isn't a massive number but it's real and every piece of it is traceable. That's what a connected SEO workflow looks like.

u/pointless_addition — 22 hours ago

3,000 visitors. $2,370 in revenue. Here's the workflow that made my SEO actually connect to money.

I want to share something real because most SEO content talks about traffic like it's the finish line. It isn't.

Last month my site got 3,175 visitors and generated $2,370 in revenue. That's $0.75 per visitor and a 1.2% conversion rate. The session time averaged 1 minute 21 seconds, up nearly 40% from the month before. I'm sharing these numbers not to brag but because I spent a long time doing SEO without having any idea whether it was working. These numbers finally changed that.

The thing I had to understand first is that SEO results don't come from one thing. They come from four things working together in the right order and for most of the early part of my journey I was doing them in the wrong order.

The foundation is authority. A new domain has none and Google will not rank your content regardless of how good it is until your site has credibility. Credibility comes from backlinks, real sites referencing yours. The most accessible way to build that foundation early is directory submissions. SaaS directories, AI tool aggregators, startup listing platforms. Each one is a legitimate site with real domain authority pointing back to yours. I used this [directory submission tool](http://getmorebacklinks.org) to handle submissions across 200+ directories in one go instead of manually tracking down and submitting to each one. It's not glamorous work but it is the foundation that makes everything else function. Once my backlink profile started filling in, Google's crawl frequency on my site increased noticeably and the content I was publishing started actually getting picked up.

Once that foundation existed I focused on content but with a different strategy than I had before. Google SEO and AI search are genuinely two different games now. Google evaluates keywords, page structure, technical performance, and backlinks. AI tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity scan the web for direct, clearly written answers to specific questions. If your content is a padded keyword-stuffed post that buries the actual answer deep in the article, AI search skips it. What gets cited in AI-generated responses is content that answers one question really well, leads with the direct answer, and reads like a knowledgeable person explaining something in plain language. I rebuilt my entire content approach around this format and used [this SEO tool](http://aiseoblogging.com) to handle keyword research and auto-publishing so I could maintain volume without writing every article from scratch. The combination of the right format and consistent output is what eventually got my content surfacing in AI-generated answers.

The step that embarrassed me most when I figured it out was indexing. I had been publishing content for months assuming Google was keeping up. Checked Search Console properly one day and found a significant backlog of articles that had never been indexed. For newer sites Google crawls on its own schedule and that schedule is slow, sometimes weeks between visits. Content that isn't indexed cannot rank and cannot be cited by AI search regardless of how well it's written. The fix is simple but most people don't make it a habit. Manually request indexing for every page you publish through Google Search Console and use IndexNow for Bing. I eventually automated this entirely with [IndexerHub](http://indexerhub.com) which connects directly to Google's Indexing API and submits new pages automatically the moment they go live. Pages that used to sit unindexed for three to four weeks started appearing in the index within hours.

The last piece was measurement and it completely changed how I made decisions. I was tracking traffic and feeling okay about the numbers but I had no idea which content was actually driving revenue. Some of my highest traffic pages were contributing almost nothing to paid signups. Some low traffic pages were converting really well. I had no visibility into this until I connected my analytics to my payment data through [Faurya](http://faurya.com). It integrates directly with Stripe and shows you exactly which pages are driving paying users, not just visitors. Once I could see that clearly I stopped producing content that looked good in dashboards and started doubling down on the formats and topics that were actually converting.

That's the workflow. Authority first through directory submissions, then content built for both Google and AI search, then fast indexing so nothing sits in a queue, then revenue attribution so you know what's actually working. The $2,370 from 3,000 visitors isn't a massive number but it's real and every piece of it is traceable. That's what a connected SEO workflow looks like.

u/pointless_addition — 22 hours ago