[New comment layout] - details here
The puzzle mnay be found at https://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/everyman/4095.
The usual Everyman trademarks, highlighted in the grid (I think it is a while since he came up with a one word to one word anagram). In this puzzle, there is a colllection of improbable anagram indicators, and, in 3D and 7D, a couple of cryptic definitions which do nothing to enhance the reputation of that clue type.
| ACROSS | ||
| 1 | HANDCUFFED |
Unable to escape, in huff, danced atrociously (10)
|
| An anagram (‘atrociously’) of ‘huff danced’. | ||
| 6 | SPAM |
Junk messages: plans to return? (4)
|
| A reversal (‘to return’) of MAPS (‘plans’). | ||
| 9 | CASABLANCA |
Pierce, cut into melon somewhere on Atlantic coast (10)
|
| An envelope (‘into’) of LANC[e] (‘pierce’) minus its last letter (‘cut’) in CASABA (‘melon’). | ||
| 10 | LISP |
In this manner of speaking, power comes forth (4)
|
| With a LISP, FORCE (‘power’) might sound like ‘forth’. | ||
| 12 | RECIPROCATE |
Cook’s directions describing flipping Mexican food, right to do the same? (11)
|
| An envelope (‘describing’) of ROCAT, a reversal (‘flipping’) of TACO (‘Mexican food’) plus R (‘right’) in RECIPE (‘cook’s directions’). | ||
| 15 | OVERTIP |
Clear absolutely minimal amount of money – and leave too much (7)
|
| A charade of OVERT (‘clear’) plus IP (1p, ‘minimal amount of money’). | ||
| 16 | ENDLESS |
Some recommend Les Six as eternal (7)
|
| A hidden answer (‘some’) in ‘recommEND LES Six’. | ||
| 17 | IRELAND |
Independent republic, ‘Éire’ label acknowledging nature’s divinity, originally? (7)
|
| First letters (‘originally’) of ‘Independent Republic Eire Label Acknowledging Natures Divinity’. | ||
| 19 | GLAZIER |
Furious Grizelda sacking Dutch tradesperson (7)
|
| An anagram (‘furious’) of ‘grizel[d]a’ minus the D (‘sacking Dutch’). | ||
| 20 | A PACK OF LIES |
Baked goods all gone, according to Spooner: porkies! (1,4,2,4)
|
| A Spoonerism of ‘a lack of pies’ (‘baked goods all gone’). | ||
| 23 | IDEA |
Everyman late, scratching backside: fancy! (4)
|
| A charade of I (‘Everyman’) plus DEA[d] (‘late’) minus the last letter (‘scratching backside’). | ||
| 24 | SCRATCHING |
Scoring – or practising turntablism? (10)
|
| Double definition, for the second, ‘turntablism’ is the manipulation of records on turntables to contribute to new compositions, and SCRATCHING is a particular technique, moving the record back and forth by hand. | ||
| 25 | NEED |
On the one hand, finally, Miss … (4)
|
| Last letters (‘finally’) of ‘oN thE onE hanD’. | ||
| 26 | OSTENSIBLY |
Rowdy boys ‘silent’, so it would appear (10)
|
| An anagram (‘rowdy’) of ‘boys silent’. | ||
| DOWN | ||
| 1 | HACK |
Journalist cut (4)
|
| Double definition. | ||
| 2 | NEST |
Wine stains covering cosy spot (4)
|
| A hidden answer (‘covering’) in ‘wiNE STains’. | ||
| 3 | CYBERATTACKS |
Harms, actual but not bodily? (12)
|
| Cryptic definition. | ||
| 4 | FLAT CAP |
Apartment: better capital investment (4,3)
|
| A charade of FLAT (‘apartment’) plus CAP (improve on, ‘better’), with ‘investment’ indicating an article of clothing, and ‘capital’ for the head. | ||
| 5 | ESCAPEE |
One absconding from starters of steak and kidney pies, you say? (7)
|
| If you pronounce the letters S K P (‘starters of Steak and Kidney Pies’), it comes out like the answer. | ||
| 7 | PHILATELIC |
Concerning hobby having enormous familiarity with The Queen’s Head (10)
|
| Cryptic definition, with the Queen being Elizabeth II or Victoria (from the Penny Black onwards). | ||
| 8 | MY PLEASURE |
This person’s business? On the contrary, don’t mention it (2,8)
|
| If it is not ‘business’ it is (‘on the contrary’) PLEASURE. | ||
| 11 | GOLDMAN SACHS |
Bullion and cash man’s collected – here? (7,5)
|
| A charade of GOLD (‘bullion’) plus MANSACHS, an anagram (‘collected’) of ‘cash mans’ (it is tempting to think of ‘collected’ as placing ‘mans’ in the middle, but that leaves an unannounced anagram of ‘cash’). Goldman Sachs is an American investment bank and financial services company. | ||
| 13 | DOMINATION |
Authority’s laughable admonition (10)
|
| An anagram (‘laughable’) of ‘admonition’. | ||
| 14 | SENEGALESE |
N African to pick up engaging eagle that’s flapping (10)
|
| An envelope (‘engaging’) of EGALE, an anagram (‘thats flapping’) of ‘eagle’ in SENSE (‘pick up’). | ||
| 18 | DEFECTS |
Deserts’ shortcomings (7)
|
| Double definition. | ||
| 19 | GRIMACE |
Dour expert’s frown (7)
|
| A charade of GRIM (‘dour’) plus ACE (‘expert’). | ||
| 21 | LIMB |
For the most part, walk dragging leg: b___ leg! (4)
|
| A charade of LIM[p] (‘walk dragging leg’) minus its last letter (‘for the most part’); plus ‘b’. | ||
| 22 | UGLY |
Revolting sung play’s regularly rejected (4)
|
| Alternate letters (‘regularly rejected’) of ‘sUnG pLaY‘. | ||

Thanks PeterO. Re the 2 CDs you mention, I would have thought that CYBERATTACKS could be ”virtual”? And while I got PHILATELIC , I pondered some time about enormous. Is it a reference to the fact that the Queen’s Head takes up so much of the coin?
Paper solvers may be puzzled by the clue for IDEA, or anyone who started this early online and has not seen the edit/Special Instructions. There was an error in the original clue for IDEA, (can’t remember exactly, maybe ”Everyman’s”).
I quite liked the primary clue, IRELAND, mainly because I learned something about the origin of the word and the divinity.
Didn’t know the term “turntablism” but I do remember the scratches on my old vinyls, the 19 minute Alice’s Restaurant by Arlo Guthrie in particular.. You just wait for it to come round, and round again. I saw Arlo Guthrie near here not so many years ago and he hammed that up, making us wait by playing long riffs for the chorus to come round again.
“Special instructions: The clue for 23ac has been edited.” to “Everyman endlessly late: fancy! (4)”.
Because the original: “Everyman late, scratching backside: fancy! (4)” was giving away the answer to 24a SCRATCHING…
FrankieG@4. Thanks for the clarification. That’s not the first time that Everyman has had to edit a crossword because it gave away another answer.
CYBERATTACKS
A mildly cryptic def. ‘Not ABH (actual bodily harm) but only AH’ seems to be the play.
PHILATELIC
The ‘enormous’ could be hinting at what pdm@1 says (stamps, not coins. Right?).
The Queen’s Head is to mislead us into thinking about a hobby related to pubs?
GOLDMANSACHS
Agree with the blogger.
Liked IRELAND and SENEGALESE.
Thanks Everyman and PeterO.
Yes KVA @5. Stamps not coins. I knew it was philatelic not numismatic. A slip there in my post.
I totally missed the actual but not bodily harm, despite working in the prison system for 25 years. I also hadn’t thought about the pubs. Sounds very plausible.
I took “enormous familiarity” to be a reference to Pommy stamps always (or is it almost always?) having nothing but the Queen’s head on them – not even a mention of which country they come from. I certainly thought of the pub, the Queen’s Head being our pub of choice when we lived a while in Oxfordshire. Thanks, Everyman and PeterO.
Thanks for the earworm, pdm! We once went to (the former – it had been renamed) Alice’s Restaurant, where the waiter has on a t-shirt saying ‘You can get anything you want’ on the front, and ‘exceptin’ Alice’ on the back.
TassieTim@8, 🙂
I found this tougher than expected for an Everyman. Perhaps I was having an off day.
I didn’t think the surface of the primarily clue was very good, so thanks, Paddymelon@2 for the elucidation.
I couldn’t parse 5d ESCAPEE, but when I saw PeterO’s explanation it became my favourite clue, along with the splendid Spoonerism at 20a A PACK OF LIES.
Thanks Everyman for the fun, and PeterO for the very helpful blog.
[Lucky you Tassie Tim@8. Hope you didn’t get done for littering. 🙂
I live in the Blue Mountains NSW, and it was at the Blue Mountains Music Festival that I had the pleasure of a great evening with Arlo Guthrie. On a corner near me is a deconsecrated church which just looks like Alice’s Restaurant and has been standing idle for years. I’d love to get a crane and drop it in my yard, but regulations prohibit that. High bushfire zone.)
Thanks for the blog , I agree with Cellomaniac@9 , a bit tougher than recently . I will be interested to see what the newer solvers think . DOMINATION was very good . I am not a fan of cryptic definitions unless they are very well done , these were not .
Overall an entertaining puzzle, though a couple of clues fell flat. I liked 7d. I interpreted enormous as practically looking at the same profile over and over. Liked 21d too. Spoonerisms seem to more stretched nowadays. Who would, in normal conversation, use a phrase like “a lack of pies”-Spooner or not.
Thanks E and PeterO
[Actually, listening to AR again, Arlo clearly says “Alice’s Restaurant isn’t the name of the restaurant, it’s the name of the song”.]
Lisp at 10 and ‘walk dragging leg’ at 21 reminded me of isihac’s def of lymph (walk with a lisp). Thanks to E for the memory and P for the blog.
Favourite: A PACK OF LIES.
I could not parse 10ac, 7d.
New for me: CASABA melon for 9ac.
Found this really tough. Made all sorts of errors too 😳. Still find it hard to understand which part of a spoonerism (which was one of my first) to insert (I had ‘a lack of pies’ but luckily no difference with letters of other answers). Also I still can’t parse the 21D with the missing letters and exclamation mark in the clue…sigh
Good morning this is the first time I’ve posted here. Could someone explain how flat cap means investment? Thanks
FLAT CAP
Quoting the blog:
‘investment’ indicating an article of clothing, and ‘capital’ for the head.
My first posting too. Much harder than usual. And Senegal is in W Africa, not N (he said pedantically).
Toby@19
Welcome aboard.
SENEGALESE
W not N. Thanks. Failed to notice the error.
Welcome ValAnn@17. FLAT CAP. I assume you’ve got the FLAT(apartment) and CAP (better). As per PeterO’s blog, capital means on the head. Investment is to do with clothing. Collins gives for investment: archaic. garment or vestment. There may be better renditions.
Think this is the first time I have posted on this particular format (definitely posted on the Quick Cryptic and Quiptic before though).
Not attempted many of the Everyman crosswords but this was a bit of a disaster all round with something like 5-8 solves being my lowly total but then I found the Quiptic last week utterly awful as well so I am going to put it down to a bad week for a novice solver. Looking back over the clues with the answer in front of me there was a few that I probably should have picked up on (as usual) and maybe a few that I might have got had I had a few more crossers in place but hey ho. See how it goes this week, hopefully the long weekend will allow me a bit more time to ponder on these.
Lastly why are certain parts of the grid above coloured? These are apparently a bit of a trademark so there is some sort of pattern involved but other than 3D and 1D rhyming I can’t see the reasoning currently.
ValAnn@17
Welcome aboard.
Investment (KA:pdm@21)
Chambers says
(in pl) clothes (archaic)
Toby@1 and KVA@20. Senegal is considered as West Africa but it’s definitely to the north.
Tricky for an Everyman I thought and I had to wait a week to reveal two I couldn’t get, CASBLANCA and CYBERATTACKS. Never heard of a casaba – are they available in Sainsbury’s? And “somewhere on Atlantic coast” is pretty vague. There are an awful lot of places on the Atlantic coast on several continents. CYBERATTACKS is just meh.
Cara @16. I agree it’s often difficult to see which way to put a spoonerism. But in this case, A pack of lies is a phrase/idiom, so that must be the answer (a lack of pies is not a recognised idiom)
Lazarus Churchyard@22. Everyman has some recurring clue types/”trademarks”. The colours and highlights are used differently by different bloggers. Sometimes it’s assumed that solvers are aware of these common Everyman clues, and no indication is given in the blog, letting us work this out for ourselves. But that’s a bit of a challenge for a newer solver.
The green here is the rhyming pair.
The purple the ” primary letters” clue, or acrostic.
The apricot is I believe the geographical clue.
The blue is the ”self-referential” clue, or when Everyman is part of the wordplay.
First time posting here, regularly read and appreciate the explanations.
Re 4d – there is also a type of investment known as a “flat cap” investment.
Re 7d – what did “concerning” indicate in this clue? Not sure what made philatelic a “concerning” hobby.
Re 11d – what did “here?” indicate? I understand the rest of the parsing but this piece confuses me.
Lazarus Churchyard@22. And welcome!. Good work with the Quick Cryptic and Quiptic. Don’t be disheartened by an Everyman puzzle. He’s quirky and inconsistent.
Ger @21 – 7d the answer is a hobby concerned with collecting Queen’s Heads – and neither I nor the blogger liked that cryptic clue, it was one of my last in.
11d – it’s a sort of clue as definition when there isn’t really a definition in the clue because the whole thing is one. In this case the here is saying it’s a place where the rest applies.
I found this tough. I was away, but it took me ages. Welcome to Lazarus Churchyard too.
Thank you to PeterO for the blog and Everyman for the puzzle
3d could have been CYBER(ATTACKS,THREATS,BULLIES,WARFARE), which all fit the clue and can only be distinguished by crossers, a sign of poor clueing in my view.
paddymelon@24
😷
Ger@28. 7d Concerning in PHILATELIC indicates the adjectival form. Re meaning on or about or concerning.
11d Here is the answer. In this case it’s the bank. Sometimes you see “this” as the definition/answer. Something to look out for.
Welcome Lazarus Churchyard!
Ger@28
PHILATELIC
Concerning Philately (the hobby under question)
(pdm has just beaten me to it)
I found this a bit more difficult than usual, which seems to agree with some of the posters.
I liked the Spoonerism for A PACK OF LIES, the good anagram for OSTENSIBLY, and the FLAT CAP capital investment. I failed to parse ESCAPEE (escape is in 1A), where I found some reference to steak and kidney pies meaning flies in Cockney rhyming slang.
Thanks Everyman and PeterO.
I’ve been doing the Everyman crossword for fifty years, have won a prize on a number of occasions, but have never enjoyed it less than recently. Can the Observer not find a setter who is more at ease with the English language and who is prepared to observe the the core conventions of cryptic crossword setting?
Ger@28. Sorry to be confusing. Trying to be helpful and made things worse. Forget what I said about the “re” in PHILATELIC. Not in this clue. Concerning is the indicator for the adjectival form. Store ‘re’ away for another day. Past my bedtime, and I didn’t even get any chocky eggs to keep the grey cells functioning. 🙁
Didn’t much like this for reasons already mentioned by others. I gave up on CYBERATTACKS (didn’t think of looking for possible rhymes with GOLDMAN SACHS). Some clues were good e.g. ESCAPEE, RECIPROCATE, A PACK OF LIES.
Defining SENEGALESE as North African is like saying IRELAND is in Southern Europe – technically true but not a useful description.
Thanks PeterO and Everyman.
The usual curate’s egg, I found. Of course I was delighted to see 1d make an appearance! And enjoyed the Spoonerism and ESCAPEE, among others. But I share Peter O’s misgivings about 3d and 7d. Thanks for the ever elegant parsings, and to Everyman for the Sunday morning diversion.
Great to see so many new names on here , this is what this blog is really for . Keep commenting , asking , learning and trying . The Guardian on a Monday is often fairly friendly .
I agree with Vicktim@36 – 30 years for me , I learned to do cryptics carrying Everyman around all week . A bit of a bad patch at the moment but we have had some good spells . New Observer owners from next week so things could change . This was calcite but it should always be talc ( copyright MOH@39 ) .
Agree with MOH@39 – curate’s egg. I liked 5dn and 15ac; also thought the surface for 16ac was imaginative, given that there are several possibilities for ENDLESS as a hidden word. I didn’t like 7dn – if “enormous” relates to the size of the monarch’s head, as per paddymelon@1 (and I don;t know what else it could refer to), why “familiarity”? “Concerning hobby where The Queen’s Head figures enormously” might make more sense and would still have the misleading pub angle. In 18dn, being pedantic, I think “desert’s” would have been better – the actual placing of the apostrophe suggests an extra S, which doesn’t appear in the answer.
@26 AlisonB thank you so much! That makes a LOT of sense now. Hadn’t realised…
Moan-laden rant incoming…
Thank you for the blog.
What level of difficulty is Everyman supposed to be at? I find it impenetrable, other than a primary-letter clue and an anagram (if I can find it).
Today’s puzzle is brutal beyond belief!
I need some chocolate eggs.
Everyman seems to be heading back toward land of the incomprehensible over the last few weeks. This one was particularly slow as I got stuck on the LISP/PHILATELIC pairing but also couldn’t parse CASABLANCA, OVERTIP, FLAT-CAP with my usual certainty. Hopefully this is an aberration – still to do today’s puzzle – and they will revert to the more straightforward clueing which opened this year.
Never heard of the CASABA melon, and couldn’t work out what kind of attacks 3d was all about. Defeated by LISP and PHILATELIC too. But I liked the Spoonerism and the capital investment, also OSTENSIBLY and LIMB.
Everyman these days is like the little girl with a curl in the middle of her forehead: he can be very good, but when he is bad, he is HORRID. Anyway, according to a post in the Guardian, the various Observer crosswords will be available paywall-free until next Sunday… and after that, who knows?
Thanks PeterO and everyone for the further discussion.
Regarding LIMB, I’m probably being dense, but while I understand how to get to the answer, I’m still confused by the surface! Is the blanked out bit suggesting a censored curse word? I was originally trying to put letters in to give the answer!
Gladys@45 , Jay has put a post on GD with a link , I have not looked at it but you might . It is about Azed and the change of ownership but should apply to Everyman .
Holypeanut@46 it is suggesting “bloody leg” , blanked out to just give the B .
gladys @ 45 I read that post to mean that this weekend Everyman is still on the guardian.com site, but from next weekend (presumably after the Observer title changes hands) it will be on the observer.co.uk site, but will not be behind a paywall (the general expectation is that most of the Observer will be).
It will be interesting to see if Alan Connor can maintain his position as Everyman setter for the Observer alongside his (presumably) salaried position as Guardian puzzles and crossword editor.
(Apologies for all the parentheses!)
Not sure if it’s not too late to be noticed… Though being a mixed bag, again, like oftentimes lately, “enormous familiarity with The Queen’s Head” in the PHILATELIC world is beyond any doubt, since it happens to appear on some of the rarest and most expensive stamps in existence today.
Thank you, Everyman and PeterO
I loved 5 down, brilliant. Found this tough though. But then I’m a relative newbie. Had to give in and reveal 23A, even after the correction. Got many of the answers before I could parse them. They all count! Thank you to the setter and PeterO here.
This makes 50 comments – not a bad haul for an Everyman.
MunroMaiden @41
7D PHILATELIC: your comment reminds me of a description (by Michael Flanders?) of his stamp collection having the UK issues arranged neatly in sets, with all other countries jammed in at the end in no particular order. I thought that the setter had such a collecter in mind, who would certainly have ‘enormous familiarity’ with the Queen’s head. I do not see that the reference can be to the size of the head on the stamp (TassieTim @7, paddymelon @1); in many commemoratives, the head is reduced to a small silhouette in one corner. As pointed out by TassieTim @7, UK stamps do not indicate the country of origin, but include a head of the monarch, generally in profile (it is many years since I even looked at my stamp collection, so I cannot be sure that there are no exceptions).
Continuing with MundoMaiden @41, your description of 16A ENDLESS promped me to revisit the blog, and notice that I had not said that, for the surface, ‘Les Six’ was a group of composers (Georges Auric, Louis Durey, Arthur Honneger, Darius Milhaud, Francis Poulenc and Germaine Tailleferre) who worked in Montparnasse in the earlier part of the 20th century. 18D DESERTS: I am not sure of your point. An S appears both in the answer and the definitions.
Lazarus Churchyard @22
paddymelon @27 has already given you your answer. I should repeat the explanation every week, but I tend to forget that there are alway new readers – and there appears to be a good crop this week. Welcome all.
Re various comments about the lack of country name on UK stamps:
As I understand the history, when postage stamps originated they were of course just for internal use. Once the International Postal Union was established, where the postal administrations in different countries set rules allowing domestic stamps to be used for inter-country post, it was required that a country name appeared to identify the issuing country; but because the UK was the inventor of stamps, then as a concession to the country’s founding role in the system it was allowed to be the one country not needing to explicitly identify itself, and has indeed never done so (being, in effect, identified by the lack of a country name). The monarch’s head (either as the whole image or part of it) has always been included, however.
Re paywalls for crosswords after the change of Observer ownership:
I went to a meeting at the new Observer offices the other day, attended by quite a crowd of Observer readers interested in, and/or concerned by, the implications of the change of ownership. Yes, after the handover in the coming days the Observer will have its own website separate from the Guardian’s. It was said explicitly at the meeting that the website will initially be open in the same way that the Guardian’s is [though that has become a bit more restrictive lately in terms of blocking free access to anyone who doesn’t allow their use to be tracked by advertisers; but there are ways round that of course]. It was also confirmed that the site will be moved behind a paywall later this year (date unspecified).
There was no clarity about whether some stuff – eg crosswords perhaps? – would remain outside the paywall or not; from the “vibes” at the meeting, I suspect this is the sort of detail that remains undecided. I didn’t ask about crosswords specifically, having more (other) questions then there was time to ask anyway. Even if, from some point, the crosswords etc are no longer freely available online to non-payers, it’s unclear whether this will apply to earlier ones dating from the time of the Guardian’s ownership – disentangling Observer material from that period from Guardian material will surely be impossible, given the lack of distinction on the existing website; though perhaps for some non-news stuff like crosswords it can and will be done.
(There’s a great deal more that could be said about that meeting, but it isn’t relevant to this blog!)
Apologies for the length of this contribution; but it’s an attempt to be helpful.
PS – thanks as always for the blog, of course. There were a few answers I couldn’t figure out before reading the above.
Managed all but three, loved ESCAPEE and A PACK OF LIES. Wish I hadn’t wasted my time trying to get CYBERATTACK. Why is laughable an anagram indicator? every week I do the Everyman the quiptic and the Monday crossword, but everymans are almost always the most unsatisfying, except for the few fantastic clues. Am I just not on the setters wavelength?
Albert @52 , thank you for the insight regarding the Observer “disentanglement” , we will all watch with interest as how it unfolds in the coming weeks and months.
As Roz @47 mentioned , I have posted a link on GD to what I believe is the only official communication we’ve had from the Observer (the link takes you to the Crossword Centre message board).
We now seem to have a definitive ( and official? ) post on the Azed blog @12 .
My now regular contribution to say that I do seem to be on Everyman’s wavelength. Not to be contrarian, just to make the point that some people like them. I hadn’t heard of the melon so thanks to the blog for that explanation. I’m a bit unpersuaded by flat cap. Criticising cyberattacks because it could have been cyberthreats misses the fact that it couldn’t because of the rhyme. The spoonerism and the queens head cryptic definition made me laugh, so thanks Everyman for a fun crossword.
lestyn @57 I don’t think it’s valid to rely on unwritten rules – surely there are regular solvers (who don’t read here) that have never noticed, let alone those trying for the first time!
I DNF those noted cryptic definitions after carefully testing the waters in this blog for if it was worth persevering. I loved ESCAPEE (although needed the crossers to fill it in), and couldn’t parse Casablanca (I don’t like melon). I can accept flapping as an anagram indicator, particularly in a vertical clue.
Thought this was quite good other than 21D which was rather feeble.
Some of the clues felt a bit Deja vu though. Not sure why, I don’t think I solved this on line before we get our belated copy.
A bit more of a challenge than usual – in a good way. Thanks Everyman and PeterO.
Impossible. Even using wildcard dictionaries there were six clues that I couild not solve. Casaba meaing melon is obscure to say the least. Senegal is in West Africa, not North Africa..
The “Queen’s Head” business was egregiously obscure.
I like “escapee”.
N Africa was definitely misleading. As a Bogart fan Casablanca jumped out at me. The spoonerism was amusing. It took ages to get cyberattacks even when I had all the cross words.On the whole it was pretty tough.
Liked this. We got there but the clues were challenging in a positive way.
This one took us 3 attempts & a bit of googling to get answers eg CASABLANCA; PHILATELIC. Not complaining as we learn every time but definitely a bit harder than previous ones.
Liked CYBERATTACKS, ESCAPEE & IRELAND.
Thanks all!