Editorial Standards
The articles on WinDailyGames exist to be useful to the people who read them. This page explains how that content is produced — who it's written for, where the facts come from, who reviews it, and how we handle the things we get wrong. We publish these standards because a reader deserves to know how the information they're acting on was made.
Who the articles are for
Our articles are written for adults in their fifties, sixties, and beyond — the same audience the rest of the site is built for. That shapes everything about how they're written. We assume an intelligent reader who wants straight information, not a beginner who needs to be talked down to and not an expert who wants jargon. We write in plain language, we lead with the practical point, and we keep the reading comfortable: larger type, generous spacing, and a calm tone.
We do not use fear to hold attention. Many of our topics — scams, financial abuse, health decisions — could easily be written to frighten. We don't write them that way. The goal is for a reader to come away better informed and more confident, not more anxious.
How we source our content
Every factual claim in our articles is meant to trace back to a primary source you could check yourself. We restrict our sources to government agencies and reputable nonprofit organizations, including the Federal Trade Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Social Security Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Medicare.gov, the National Institute on Aging, FINRA, and AARP.
We do not build articles from other publishers' summaries, marketing material, blog posts, or industry-funded "wellness" and "investment" sites. When an article cites a number — a Medicare premium, a Social Security claiming age, a penalty amount — that figure comes from the agency responsible for it, and the source is named at the bottom of the article so you can verify it. Each article ends with a "Where to learn more" list pointing to those primary sources.
Where the facts are genuinely contested — where the research literature or the law doesn't give a single clean answer — we say so plainly rather than pretending a consensus exists.
How articles are reviewed
Articles are reviewed before publication by our editorial reviewer, Kim, who checks each piece for accuracy, tone, and whether the sourcing holds up. The review pays particular attention to the categories where a mistake carries real consequences: anything touching health, money, or scam recognition, where a reader may act on what they read. A claim that can't be supported by a cited primary source gets corrected or removed before the article goes live.
How we keep articles current
Some of our subjects change on a schedule. Medicare premiums and enrollment dates reset every year. Social Security figures and tax rules — including required-distribution ages and penalty amounts — change when the law changes. For those articles, we anchor the specific numbers to the most recently confirmed figures, label them with the year, and point readers to the agency's own page for the current-year amount. We review the time-sensitive articles periodically and update them as the underlying rules change.
Corrections
We will get things wrong sometimes, and when we do we want to fix it. If you spot an error — a wrong number, an outdated rule, a claim that doesn't match its source — please tell us through our Contact page. We review every correction request, fix confirmed errors promptly, and update the article. Substantive corrections are made openly rather than quietly buried.
Advertising and editorial independence
WinDailyGames is supported by advertising, and the site displays ads. Our articles are not. No article on this site is sponsored, paid for, or influenced by an advertiser, and we do not let an advertiser shape what an article says. Where ads appear on the site, they are clearly labeled and visually separated from editorial content. The line between an advertisement and something we wrote should always be obvious; if it ever isn't, that's a mistake we want to hear about.
What this content is not
Our articles are general information, not professional advice. Nothing on WinDailyGames is medical advice, legal advice, or financial advice, and reading an article here does not create any professional relationship. We can explain how Medicare is structured, how a scam works, or what a required minimum distribution is — but we cannot tell you what to do about your specific health, money, or legal situation. For decisions that affect you personally, consult a qualified professional who knows your circumstances: your doctor, your attorney, a tax professional, or a licensed financial advisor you've vetted.
Getting in touch
Questions about our content, a correction to report, or a suggestion for a topic? Reach us through the Contact page. We read what comes in.