This homepage has been reorganized to work more like an encyclopedia portal. Instead of pushing visitors into one narrow path, it now explains how the site is structured, where each cluster belongs, and which doorway makes sense for different types of reading intent.
The site is now centered around three major portals: a Pages Hub for article-style reading, a Brand Hub for spelling and app-name variations, and a Games Hub for title-based browsing. That gives both users and crawlers a cleaner way to understand the relationships between your inner pages.
Use this portal when the visitor wants rules, strategy, FAQs, long-tail reading, bonus pages, comparison articles, or evergreen reference material. It works as the encyclopedia shelf for the site.
Use this portal to consolidate spelling variants such as YonoRummy, Yono Rummy, UonoRummy, and Uono Rummy. It helps explain that multiple search phrases belong to one brand cluster.
Use this portal when readers are browsing by game title or category. It separates skill card games, instant titles, fishing games, slots, and tables into easier collections.
Best for visitors who want the main game overview first, then rules, strategy, and supporting sequence guides.
Useful for readers moving from game awareness into practical guides, bluffing articles, and mistake-prevention pages.
Helpful when users are in discovery mode and want a broader overview before choosing a specific title or category.
Best for visitors who already know the brand and only need the cleanest route to the main download destination.
Ideal for internal-link cleanup and for visitors who arrive through alternate brand spellings or app-name searches.
Good for deep readers who want topic hubs, long-tail supporting pages, comparison content, and offer-related articles.
These are the best entry pages for building stronger internal authority. They cover the biggest topics and give smaller pages a cleaner destination to point toward.
The site footer logic should now feel simpler: article pages point up to the three hubs, hub pages point sideways to each other, and the homepage acts as the master overview. This makes bottom links read like a real reference system instead of a random mix of calls to action.