A week or two ago, I was driving home from the bank and lamenting the fact that I have no artistic skill beyond my mediocre ability to sculpt with moldy mashed potatoes. “Why!?” I cried, nearly plowing into several pedestrians. “Why can’t my uselessGuitar Heroskills translate to a useful real-world activity that could, quite possibly, win me someladies?”

Not a day later, I was introduced toGuitar Rising, which Nick Chester and I got to demo on the show floor at this year’s GDC. Adopting the conventions of the many guitar-based rhythm games now available,Risingtakes it a step further and uses a USB dongle to hitch up the guitar of your choice to your PC, and prompts players to hit frets and strings to play along with some pretty choice music. While it’s not necessarily designed to turn you into a guitar god overnight, from our short time with it, it really seemed like a product that could boost dexterity. And these pudgy fingers need all the help they can get.

Hell is Us gameplay reveal

Attaching that competitive element and a score to the act itself can keep people coming back, and might help to develop some of those dormant or otherwise nonexistent skills. I sucked something fierce, but hey — if a few weeks ofGuitar Herocould see me up to expert level, what would a few months ofGuitar Risingdo?

Black Ops 6 Season 5 Multiplayer Ransack Mode

Tekken Tag Tournament 2: a black and white Jin and Heihachi stand back-to-back.

PEAK Bing Bong plushie

Silent Hill f: a woman’s face covered in blossoming but deadly looking flowers.

Mei NERF gun in OW2

Battlefield 6 vehicles combat

Several men standing and watching at an explosion in the distance in Battlefield 6.

BO7 key art

yordles animation still image