
This year we started a small campaign as a way to see how far we could take a community. We couldn’t have guessed what came of the diy discord server and this crazy music community. These are a collection of final thoughts and rankings of releases from 2023, submitted by discord admins and mods. Thank you for all of the support we continue to receive. DIY or DIE.
2023 AOTY (diygest)
Margot:

5. Emergency, Exit- Aren’t We Amphibians (Thumbs Up Records) If you’ve ever wanted to know the definition of convincing, I’m sure that when you open the dictionary and find the word, a picture of Aren’t We Amphibians will be right there. These are six jam packed songs that will take you from crowdkilling to crying on the drive on the way to work. The riffs are immeasurable, the energy is high, it’s banger through and through.
4. That’s What Friends Are For- Saturdays At Your Place, Summerbruise, Shoplifter (No Sleep Records) With Summerbruise and Saturdays at Your Place already being in my top ten bands of all time, then going and adding a sweet little bonus like Shoplifter? I might as well be pronounced dead on scene. I’ve said it before, but these bands truthfully know what they wanted here. The tomfoolery and goofiness of friendship shines through erratically. Each band brought their best material to date for this split, you can only wonder how they’ll go up from here? (They will because they always do because they’re all perfect)
3. Madison and Floral- Sign Language (Sunday Drive Records) Holy mother of God. No one could’ve prepared me for the hold that this Cincinnati native bands album could’ve had/has on me. Brash, bold, and beautiful can be the only words to describe how Madison and Floral composes itself. The reverb and chorus pedals fluctuating into the chunkiest distortion on earth while being backed by two amazing voices is something to get rowdy about. Unfamiliar is the best shoegaze track in the last five years and I will be damned to back out of that opinion.
2. Alt. Account- Equipment (Klepto Phase) I’ve never been a firm believer in the philosophy of, “good things come to people who wait.”, but I’d be eating my own words if Equipment didn’t prove that to me this year. The fabled “LP2” of Equipment failed to let anyone waiting down. It exceeded everyone’s expectations and honestly switched the game up for DIY in 2023. Holy lord does this thing have hooks and bridges that will infest your brain for weeks on end. The samples are enough to make this an instant classic, thank you Equipment from Ohio.
1. New Game Plus- Palette Knife (Take This To Heart Records) I don’t even know where to start about New Game Plus. I think this is probably the closest I’ve been in my life to reaching nirvana. New Game Plus is so much fun, jam-packed with nerdy references, complimented by some of the most brain melting riffs built for comprehensive thought. You’d be doing yourself a disservice by not even trying this LP. I will stand til the end of time defending this project, it is the best thing anyone could’ve asked for out of 2023 as a whole. Alec is one of the best lyricists in DIY right now and I’m personally jumping off the walls, screaming, waiting for the next palette knife release.
Honorable Mentions:
Always Cloudy- Saturdays At Your Place (No Sleep Records) There’s nothing new I could say about this EP. Everyone knows it’s perfect, everyone knows Saturdays At Your Place is on top. Always Cloudy is the unsung hero of this year.
Make Up Your Place- Tiny Voices (Thumbs Up Records) Thumbs Up Records roster proves once again they are a force to be reckoned with. Tiny Voices is a gem of Wisconsin and they make my heart happy.
Quinnothy- Are You There God? It’s Me, Margot (Self Released) I love my friend Quinn. I love his music and I truthfully believe he could do no wrong in any writing endeavor. Thank you for this Quinn, it means the world to me.
Wasps Nest- Corduroy Pants (We’re Trying Records) Rest in peace to Corduroy Pants.( more on that later). I won’t go to into detail about Corduroy Pants just yet but Wasps Nest is such a beautiful single. I’ve cried to it, I’ve danced to it, I’ve screamed my lungs out until you can’t hear my voice anymore. Listen to Corduroy Pants, Lansing Emo forever.
It Takes Time- The Others Like Us (Thumbs Up Records) Such a beautifully honest project, holds some of the worst emotions in the best format available. The Others Like Us deserve the world, they’re the skramz/emo southern sweetheart.
The Yuppies Are Winning- Harrison Gordon (Self Released) Remember that time during covid when you just graduated and got that job at that gas station? Remember the addiction to nicotine that came with it? What about the overall feeling of existential dread and failure after that period of your life? Maybe not all those words describe The Yuppies Are Winning perfectly, but that’s my perception. One of the most solid anthem emo albums of the last ten years. I love Harrison Gordon almost as much as I love 20$ on pump three, Brisk pink lemonade, and marlboro red 72’s.
Imre

Albums.
Kerosene Heights – Southeast Of Somewhere
Equipment – Alt account
Tiny Voices – Make Up Your Place
Juice Falls – Lake Side Drive
Thanks! I Hate It – Lovers Lane
Ep/splits
The Others Like Us – It Takes Time
Saturdays At Your Place – Always Cloud. Saturdays At Your Place, Summerbruise, SHOPLIFTER – That’s What Friends Are For
Me Too, Thanks, Red Sun, The Others Like Us – Lost Friends/Found Family
Leisure Hour – Leisure Hour
Nikki’s Top 10 Releases of 2023!!

- always cloudy – saturdays at your place
- Make Up Your Place – Tiny Voices
- Hope This Clears Things Up. – MooseCreek Park
- RUCKUS! – Movements
- 1989 (Taylor’s Version) – Taylor Swift
- The Yuppies Are Winning – Harrison Gordon
- GUTS – Olivia Rodrigo
- LIVING PROOF – DRAIN
- Psychic Dance Routine – Scowl
- Why Would I Watch – Hot Mulligan
Emma’s Top 5 of 2023:

2023 Album of the Year Picks
That’s what Friends are For by Saturdays at your Place, Shoplifter and Summerbruise (Three insane bands, awesome split.)
Southern Hospitality by Week Knees (If you haven’t heard this, please do yourself a favor. Seth Rogenstock is my favorite song but this is truly a no skip EP)
Always Cloudy by Saturdays at your Place (No skips, truly. Saturdays at your Place has an incredibly special vision and this felt like an EP I will always remember..)
Hope This Clears Things Up by Moose Creek Park (Insane twinkly realness by an incredible DIY band from Long Island. If you don’t know them, you should.)
The Whaler by Home is Where (Original, I know! But truly an instant classic.)
Joe

Top 5 EPs
- 1. Saturday’s At Your Place – Always Cloudy
A very legitimate contender for the most important and iconic release of the year. Some of the best production the entire emo genre has ever been graced with to accompany 6 spectacular, dynamic and enthralling songs. Whether they’re complimenting your shoes or recalling excruciating battles about one’s sexuality within 19 minutes Saturdays At Your Place has etched themselves into emo history.
- 2. The Casper Fight Scene – Haymaker
On the follow-up to their excellent 2022 EP “Good Deal” The Casper Fight Scene stick to their guns. Or well, fists. 5 succinct songs with gravelly, emphatic vocals jam packed with hooks and stellar riffs aplenty. Not a moment is wasted and soon you’ll fall right in the same cycle of hitting the repeat button.
- 3. Small Comforts – Somewhere In Between
Small Comforts delivers 5 endearing emo pop escapades about being a burnout. It brandishes hard hitting guitars, jumpy rhythms, and emphatic choruses all played to perfection. Combine them with lyrics that hit close to home, especially when you want to be anywhere else, and Small Comforts might soon grab a special place along with your deepest self-doubts.
- 4. Fly Over States – Anti-Aircraft
2000s flavored Post-hardcore in its glorious, raw state. High pitched screams, crunchy, in-your-face guitars, sprawling riffs, and sassy clean vocals that are sorely missed. 5 great songs in 11 minutes. You don’t have an excuse to skip this Montana band’s strong debut.
- 5. Tiny Voices – Make Up Your Place
A must listen to for people who love their emo to be noodley and up-beat. As an added bonus the vocals hit soaring highs and exquisite lows with remarkable timbre. Add in a few features and this is a promising showcasing from a burgeoning scene in Wisconsin that is certainly one to watch in 2024.
Honorable mentions
Guitar Fight From Fooly Cooly – Drought
Leisure Hour – S/T
Equipment – Miracle
Aren’t We Amphibians – Emergency, Exit
Saturdays At Your Place/Summerbruise/Shoplifter – That’s What Friends Are For
Top 5 LPs
- 1. Hail The Sun – Divine Inner Tension
The most scarily consistent band of the past 15 years adds another jewel to its crown. Hail The Sun’s perfectly blended cocktail of surgically precise yet erratic instrumentation and frantic, charismatic vocal melodies once again delivers a jaw-dropping and intoxicating end product. Whether it’s the heart thumping energy of “Tunnel Vision Alibi”, the sing-along chorus of “Maladapted”, the feral anger of “Tithe”, the emotionally vulnerability of “Feeble Words”, or the terrifyingly enchanting atmosphere of “Under The Floor” Hail The Sun accomplishes them all with flying colors. Hell, the track “The Story Writes Itself” is a roller coaster by itself. The perfect blend of chaos, melody, and technical ability that harkens back to the greats like Thursday and The Mars Volta while still blazing its own trail. Simply put Hail The Sun is the pinnacle of modern post-hardcore.
- 2. Hot Mulligan – Why Would I Watch?
Hot Mulligan delivers far and away their most mature record to date. Under the surface of silly song titles like “John The Rock Cena Can You Smell What The Undertaker” and “This Song Is call It’s Called What’s It Called?” are lyrics about body dysmorphia that were brought on from a religious upbringing, the painful battle of a loved one afflicted with Alzheimer’s, and how poverty leads to a generational passing down of addictions. In addition, this album has the most ambitious song writing they’ve ever attempted. A lot of people wouldn’t predict a Hot Mulligan song in 2023 to have multiple tempo changes and time signature change, but here we are. “Why Would I Watch?” is soundtrack to reaching your mid-twenties and having no answers to the questions you’ve been asking for your whole life. It’s that emptiness that makes the climaxes with screams of anguish all the more impactful.
- 3-T. Palette Knife – New Game+
Palette Knife is dangerous. A rhythmically savvy, riff focused band with a knack for memorable chorus and melodies? It is simply not okay for a band as instrumentally talented as they are to also be able to write at least a dozen melodies that’ll get stuck in your head. Crisp, airtight production, an affinity for unabashed nerdiness, and a truly fun loving energy makes Palette Knife a band hard to *not* fall in love with. The real trick up PK’s sleeve however is their pension for awesome instrumental curveballs or a remarkable tempo change. Whether the section reuses an already awesome melody previously in the song or a new one that grabs your attention it’ll make you hit the replay button again and again. Soon after you’ll catch yourself singing, “peel the paint from your canvas,” intrinsically during your shower.
- 3-T. Awakebutstillinbed – Chaos Takes the Wheel And I am a Passenger
Awakebutstillinbed waves the banner for emo at its most intimate, vulnerable, and raw form. Jangly guitars and winding, unique song structures lay a perfect canvas for a truly moving vocal and lyrical performance from Shannon Taylor. The album starts with her meek and raspy voice unconfidently asking “Do people really care about me?” Yet by the end of the 6 minute journey she is brazenly yelling “I WOULD HAVE BEEN THERE FOR YOU” and “OPEN YOUR EYES THIS IS YOUR LIFE!” Shannon will defeatedly speak lyrics that’ll make your tear ducts well up and then let out a blood curdling scream that raises every hair on your body. 57 minutes of stellar songwriting with anthemic highs, disparaging lows, and truly visceral vocals.
P.S. “Redlight” is one of the greatest emo songs ever written.
- 5. Koyo – Would You Miss It?
Right from the opening drum fill Koyo makes it known why their brand of pop punk is always a welcome surprise. The hard-hitting, fast-paced instrumentals meld perfectly with the shouting vocals and then after an amazing mid-song transition into the stellar outro of “51st State” you are literally shotgun blasted into one of the catchiest songs of the entire year “You’re On The List (Minus One)”. Soon you’ll see Koyo wears their influences on their sleeves. You’re hit by the moody “Flatline Afternoon” with a crazy feature from Vein.fm vocalist Anthony DiDio and two more great songs with features from Gladsjaw’s Darryl Palumbo and The Movielife’s Vinnie Caruana. Their hardcore background makes songs like “I Might Not” and “Anthem” hit so much harder, but they do an excellent job at yearning on songs like “Postcards” too. A remarkably solid record front to back that will get you practicing your mic grabs and stage dives at home.
Honorable Mentions
Clipboards – Endless Days
Thanks! I Hate It – Lovers Lane
Home Is Where – The Whaler
Jeromes Dream – The Gray in Between
Kerosene Heights – Southeast of Somewhere
100 Gecs – 10000 Gecs
Liquid Mike – S/T
Full Blown Meltdown – Mollify
FinalBossFight! – S/T
Captain Jazz – S/T
Jesus Piece – So Unknown…
Equipment – Alt Account
Mauve – About the Weather
Moosecreek Park – I Hope This Clears Things Up
The Speed of Sound in Seawater – Second Nature
Awsty

My release of the year is the Always Cloudy EP by Saturdays At Your Place. To be blunt, I hold a lot of sentiment for this lil record along with some bias towards it. The bias being living in Kalamazoo. For the longest time I have been searching for something to be passionate about or a hobby. It wasn’t until 2022 that a friend of mine recommended that I attend some local DIY music shows in kalamazoo. I attended A LOT of shows but somehow avoided S@YP. I’ve been to the runoff and the irish goodbye, iconic kzoo venues but never heard of or encountered the band. I had no idea they were the biggest act in kalamazoo and were quickly rising to the top of the DIY scene. So imagine my surprise when my first listen came at the recommendation of a twitter friend from ohio. Since their recommendation I’ve now attended a lotta shows featuring S@YP and i’m incredibly excited to see them for the first time in a Kalamazoo venue in February 2024. As for the music on Always Cloudy, it’s amazing. I’m no critical music thinker or writer. I can say though that every song rocks especially in a pit with a live crowd. I’ve experienced all of these songs live and I think that tremendously boosts Always Cloudy as my release of the year. Experiencing Eat Me Alive live is definitely something I’ll always treasure. I just love how the song starts sombre but gains momentum and explodes. The energy is insanely contagious and I can’t help but scream along no matter when I’m listening to it. Always Cloudy in Kalamazoo has the same effect on me, the ending chorus makes me wish I could crowd surf every time I hear it. Ironically, the days feel less cloudy when I listen to these songs.
andesites 2023 end of year list!

1. New Game Plus – Palette Knife
2. Summertime Concrete – Gwuak!
3. Alt. Account – Equipment
4. Endless Days – Clipboards
5. Southeast of Somewhere – Kerosene Heights
6. Medium Gnarly – Swiss Army Wife
7. FBF! – FinalBossFight!
8. Make Up Your Place – Tiny Voices
9. Lovers Lane – Thanks! I Hate It
10. About The Weather – Mauve
Vens fav albums 2023-

albums-
The Whaler – Home Is Where
Why Would I Watch? – Hot Mulligan
Alt. Account – Equipment
Freak Of Nature – Heart Attack Man
You Look Like A Stranger – Mat Kerekes
eps-
S@yp- almost cloudy
Ben Quad – Hands Signals
Charmer – Seney Stretch
KIMS FAVS 2023

Albums
- Mollify – Full Blown Meltdown
- Alt Account – Equipment
- Make Up Your Place – Tiny Voices
- YHITOPIFAH – Robopumpkin
- Slouch – Kicksie
- Endless Days – Clipboards
- FBF! – Finalbossfight!
- Lessons That We Swear to Keep – Free Throw
- The Things I Dont Need – Cinema Stare
- Hope This Clears Things Up – MooseCreek Park
EPs
- Daylight – Keep Flying
- New Game + – Palette Knife
- Always Cloudy – Saturdays At Your Place
- Acoustic Vol 1 – Motion Sick
- Page Not Found – Cascade Riot
- Live, Laugh, Fuss – Routine Fuss
- Haymaker – The Casper Fight Scene
- FIVE – Cacophony Kid
- If We Fall Asleep Too Early – The Merrier
- All Frogs Go To Heaven – Worry Club
SINGLES
- Friendsgiving Edibles – I Swallow Ghosts
- Jerry – Potionseller
- Pizza Rolls – Bottom Bunk
- F.A.K.E. – Cliffdiver
- Stainless – Alex Vile
- Would You Tell Picasso To Sell His Guitar – Ben Quad
- Come Back For Me – Midwest Skies
- Save Me – Free Friends
- Castleton – Aren’t We Amphibians
- Space Forest – Frame And Mantle
Jackson’s 2023 final thoughts

Releasing your art as the creator has to be the most rewarding venture in all walks of life. Here is something I made, please absorb it and feed me your thoughts. This year I had many desirable works to choose from, ranging from freshman class to grizzled vets. My top 5 releases from 2023 are a quick introduction to whatever you should be picking up in the new year.
.yourhouseistheonlyplaceifeelathome- Robopumkin
Encapsulating as many feelings as one album can, Max Adams captured one specific theme in his 3rd LP, . Questioning commitment to others behind an insane bass tone has become my entire aesthetic for 2024 on the back of Robopumkin. Max does an amazing job of hammering home that feeling being stuck in thought about life and relationships, deep bass droning out an addictive rhythm in almost every track.
Track: From away (listen to the last beat of each blast)
FFO: hard truths, acceptance, rough talks
.Always Cloudy- saturdays at your place
Meeting these guys in a Kalamazoo basement felt correct, on par for every single theme from this EP. If you need a soundtrack from 2023 or a reminder of growth and artistic ability, you don’t have to venture outside of the Midwest for the best examples. Taking tips from their legendary predecessors, they ended the year touring with staples on the scene (Free Throw, Charmer, Prince Daddy), not only furthering the example they have set for young talent, but easily entering the watchful, critical eye of the emo community.
Favorite: Eat me alive
FFO: pushing your friends, summarizing youth, not wanting to go home after the best night of all time
.Endless Days- Clipboards
I’ve had plenty to say about this awesome release, also being my favorite album this year. It’s very a fun, upbeat, and sporadic album filled with artistic ability. The two slower bridge songs fit right where they need to or make feel like turning it off, no skips for me. Just please go listen once all the way through for me, you’ll randomly find yourself smiling.
Favorite: Wasted
FFO: two guitar tones, blast beats, fun build-ups.
.Emergency, Exit- Aren’t We Amphibians
I also wrote about this ep when it dropped, being that I was eager for it to drop. AWA facilitates to all emo music fans, hammering that solid Midwest sound and Josh’s vocal work speaks for itself. Front to back this ep is a no-skip scenario, with fun breakdowns and heavier elements keeping me entertained. Lyrically, some of the songs hit home for me and others I’m sure.
Favorite: Yard Work
FFO: skateboards, ballroom dancing in the pit, existential realizations
.The Yuppies Are Winning- Harrison Gordon Has A Band
If there was a freshman xxl class for this year, HGHAB could have outshined the rest. With “cigs inside?” dropping as a single, it was a bright foreshadowing to a very solid work of art that became the album. My best comparison to the sound of this album is something like Jeff Rosenstock and Joyce Manor had a badass nephew that they hung out with all the time. Yuppies brings feverish guitar tones and college kids that had to somehow deal with growing up during the pandemic, and I think they killed major aspects. An album I think a lot of kids getting into music will look to for new inspirations and trends.
Favorite: cigs inside?
FFO: being pissesd off at the world, house shows on campus, wearing overalls but also sometimes a suit
.Honorably 5 more addicting releases
Hope This Clears Things Up- Moosecreek Park
Southeast of Somewhere- Kerosene Heights
Summertime Concrete- Gwuak!
S/T- liquid Mike (really excited for new music)
The Whaler- Home is Where
Ivy’s 2023 End of Year:

2023 was the year that found me more involved in the scene than ever, thanks in large part to the slew of year-defining and even genre-defining releases that we were given. I was fortunate enough to have outlets, both here and over at Bummer Brews, to write reviews about many of my favorite releases of the year already, so I won’t be going into as much depth here. Rather, I’ll give an overview of my favorite releases, and take the opportunity to gush about some releases that I haven’t had the chance to talk about as much. Without further ado, my 2023 AOTY list:
1: Alt. Account by Equipment
Alt. Account is, to be frank, the most cathartic release of the year, for a number of reasons. For starters, Equipment is a band that really embodies the values of our little DIY scene – making and shipping their own merch, booking their own shows, really doing everything themselves. To see a band so immersed in this ethos, with so many releases already under their belt, finally put out an album that has been in the works for as many years as Alt. Account has, is incredibly fulfilling. The fact that they hit a home run with the album is honestly already just icing on the cake. It’s not just the circumstance that puts this album at the top of this list, however. Alt. Account is a fiercely sincere, incredibly emotional, and intensely relatable album, about the feelings and troubles of growing up. Songs detail feelings of inadequacy and stagnation, cover relationships and the changes they face, and ultimately serve as a way for vocalist and songwriter Nick Zander to talk to his past self (literally, using samples from his old YouTube channel). Seeing this conversation end in reassurance for both the past and present Nick moves me in a way very few albums ever have, and cemented Alt. Account as my album of the year. To read my thoughts more in depth, check out my full LP review here.
Favorite Track: Your Clothes Without You in Them
2: Madison & Floral by Sign Language
Sign Language hit the ground sprinting with the release of their debut LP, Madison & Floral. This LP is an incredible step forward for the sound that Sign Language had already grown comfortable with in their earlier single releases – an incredible blend of hazy, shoegaze-esque guitars, pounding hardcore drums and rough vocals, and lyricism that found them popularity in emo circles. Madison & Floral combines these sounds in a way I’ve genuinely never seen before, to an incredible effect. Each song is unique but never lacking in energy, with intensely personal lyricism backed up by equally passionate instrumentals. If Madison & Floral has somehow slipped under your radar, you are seriously missing out. As with Alt. Account, I have a full LP review up, this one on Bummer Brews, if you want more detail.
Favorite Track: World of Light
3: All the Nothing I Know by Nick Webber
Easily the softest and least emo album on my list, All the Nothing I Know absolutely stole the show for me in terms of early 2023 releases. The debut release from Nick Webber, guitarist in Denver-based band A Place For Owls, serves as a vehicle for Webber to flex some serious songwriting talent. Each song on the album sounds noticeably different from the last – the album spans from slow, soft, indie love songs, to more folk inspired inspections of daily life, all the way to more rock-inspired pieces that create a stunning sense of scale. Despite this variation in genre, the album feels incredibly focused, with the entirety of the album having an incredibly contemplative, reflective, and atmospheric vibe. This album came out right as I was on my first and biggest solo trip, and listening to tracks like “Ghost Variations”, “Too Close”, and “I Tried to Warn You” while driving the unfamiliar, snowy mountains and countrysides of Vermont is an experience I won’t ever forget.
Favorite Track: I Tried to Warn You
4: Make Up Your Place by Tiny Voices
Make Up Your Place is an incredibly special and personal album to me. Not only was my review of MUYP my first ever published piece of writing, but I’ve made and met more friends through MUYP than any other piece of music. It’s fitting, then, that such a personal album to me has equally personal songwriting and themes. MUYP is an album that, to me, reads pretty linearly, as you move through the different stages and emotions of a breakup. The album begins almost repentant, full of apologies and regret. By the end of the album, the tone is angrier and far less apologetic. This shift gives the sense that, with time and distance, the singer has realized that they were not the one in the wrong, or at least not as in the wrong as they thought, and are standing up for themselves in a way they weren’t able to at the beginning. Each song is incredibly catchy and addictive, with some of my favorite guitar parts of any release this year, and the album works as a whole to be incredibly cohesive. MUYP is an incredible album, and will undoubtedly leave you wanting more. Like Alt. Account and Madison & Floral, you can read my more detailed thoughts on Make Up Your Place here.
Favorite Track: Where My Dawgz At?
5: It Takes Time by The Others Like Us
If it isn’t obvious already, the main draw of most releases to me is lyricism. I listen to the lyrics of a song before I note anything about the instrumentals, production, or anything else. That being said, It Takes Time is quite possibly the most lyrically vulnerable release of the year, and definitely one of my favorites. The album reads almost as a confession, as the songs range from being uncomfortable at a party in “Shred Flanders” to what is essentially a suicide note in “You’re Supposed to Say Over, Over.” Often screamed, the emotional lyrics are usually accompanied by some of the most energetic drums and dramatic guitar coming out of the scene right now, which lends the songs the weight they need to pull off the heavy subject matter. It Takes Time is an incredibly emotional, incredibly raw release, that puts all its cards on the table in a way that is bound to have you moved. You can read my full review of this release on Bummer Brews as well.
Favorite Track: “You’re Supposed to Say Over, Over.”
Honorable Mentions:
As a Sketchpad LP by As a Sketchpad
Remnant by Forage and Wander
Always Cloudy by Saturdays at Your Place
The Yuppies are Winning by Harrison Gordon
Southeast of Somewhere by Kerosene Heights
Quinn

Hi, I am Quinn from twitter and here are 5 essential diy releases from 2023.
- Southeast of Somewhere – Kerosene Heights
- Haymaker – The Casper Fight Scene
- Endless Days – Clipboards
- Alt. Account – Equipment
- New Game + – Palette Knife

Leave a comment