Welcome to Lilli Digest!
We love books, board games, and all the interesting things in between. We’re passionate about the stories we read, the games we play, and the worlds they create, and we enjoy sharing that enthusiasm with fellow readers and players.
Our goal is to help you discover a new board game to bring to the table or a great book to add to your reading list. The Mystic Digest is a paid subscription space where some of those interests branch into tarot readings and themed explorations, offering a different way to look at stories, history, and unresolved mysteries. Thanks for reading.

LATEST POSTS
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Psychological Horror Books: Dark, Disturbing Reads That Get Under Your Skin
Psychological horror isn’t about jump scares or gallons of blood. It’s about the slow unease. The kind that creeps in quietly, settles into your thoughts, and lingers long after you’ve closed the book. These stories focus on fractured minds, unreliable perspectives, isolation, obsession, and the terrifying realization that something is off — even if you
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Board Games That Actually Work for Brand-New Players (No rules overload. No hobby intimidation. Just good first impressions.)
Getting someone into modern board games is a delicate operation. You’re not trying to prove how clever the hobby is — you’re trying to make sure no one mentally checks out halfway through the explanation. The best “intro games” don’t feel like homework, don’t punish mistakes too harshly, and don’t require a flowchart to take
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Alone, Cut Off, and Unsettled – Books That Make Isolation Feel Uncomfortable
Some books don’t rely on monsters, violence, or even obvious danger to get under your skin. Instead, they do something quieter — they isolate their characters and let the unease grow from there. In these stories, isolation isn’t just about distance or remote locations. It’s about being cut off emotionally, socially, or psychologically. The world
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Get Inside the Villain’s Head — Killer POV Fiction Picks
There’s something weirdly compelling about stories told from the other side of the crime scene — where the protagonist is the bad guy. Not just murder mysteries where we chase a culprit, but full-on narratives from the mind of someone capable of violence. If you’re into psychological thrillers that feel like a dark mirror, here






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