For most of the game, Bill Belichick's squad was able to apply pressure on Wilson and force him to either throw the ball away or go down with a sack. New England's defense once again came up clutch. Meanwhile, Wilson was 18 of 36 passing for 157 yards.įor a more detailed breakdown of how this game unfolded, check out our main takeaways below. Tight end Pharaoh Brown had arguably the play of the day with a 58-yard touchdown score. Mac Jones finished 15 of 29 for 201 yards and a touchdown. After the ball was batted around in the air, veteran receiver Randall Cobb nearly got a hand on the ball, but was unable to corral what would have been the miracle game-winning score. While that did seem like the dagger at the time, New York was within range up until the final seconds and Zach Wilson had an opportunity for a game-winning Hail Mary. However, the ensuing Jets possession resulted in a safety sparked by Matthew Judon, which pushed the New England lead to five. A 13-play, 87-yard touchdown drive brought New York within three points and within striking range of either tying or taking the lead. New England had built up a double-digit lead by halftime, but the Jets managed to make it a game all the way until the final seconds. This matchup between AFC East rivals tightened up toward the end. With the win, the Patriots extend their winning streak against the Jets to 15. But that's simply impossible for me to do.The New England Patriots are in the win column for the first time in 2023 after outlasting the New York Jets 15-10 at MetLife Stadium. How am I to keep track of all the games coming out in a year, two years, indefinitely? How am I to keep track of all the work-in-progress indie games that develop in piecemeal iterations over time, who may only come up to report their progress every once in a blue moon? Maybe if you only play the popular and upcoming games, or games in one specific genre and style, sure, maybe you could track them in your head. It's different than having a backlog: at least in a backlog, everything is visible in list form in your various game libraries. Plus, what about the games who's style I remember, but names I forget? There is no conceivable way I could keep track of all of those games in my head. On GG|, my primary tracker, I'm at 500 games that I want to play. My backlog is down to 40 games as well, which is manageable, though Game Pass has slowed down how fast I'm getting it downĬlick to shrink.It's less important to me that I log what I'm playing, or have already completed, and more important that I keep track of games I'm interested in and want to try in the future. ![]() If I know I have £215 worth of games in my backlog, I can probably pass on getting another game for £19.99 It's cool having a list of every game I have beaten spanning back almost a decade, and being able to see how much I have spent on my backlog so far is a great way to stop me buying more games It's a Google Sheet so I can update it from my home PC, work PC, laptop or phone, so it's not even a faff to update ![]() Then I have a 3rd tab where I keep a running total of spend as the year goes on Then whenever I start a game I copy the name into the "now playing" tab, which is arranged by year It's not much work to be honest, I just add a game when I buy one, then add how much it cost me, so that gives you a full list of which games are in your backlog Most years I beat 25-45 games, but yeah this year will be in the upper region of that I think ![]() Well it's been a lockdown year so I've not had much else to do heh I also track how much I spend on games each year (From 2015 anyway) I have a tab for backlog and what I paid for each game, and another tab for what I have played and when (Going back to 2012)
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