Somehow I managed to not be around when "that" topic started; 3700+ posts in, I can only be glad I dodged that bullet. No one, however peripherally involved, is going to come out of that mess in grace and glory. I can only hope that "I am not going to demean myself by responding [proceeds to throw down a wall of invective]" becomes an appropriately ridiculous meme.
...So, moving on before I become what I roll my eyes at...
It would be interesting to have a topic about how to improve games in the era of bloated AAA publishing and ramen-and-generic-soda indie games without causing a budget to skyrocket.
Ways to "gameify" dialogue that don't involve standard conversation trees/wheels or interrogation topics.
How to empower a player without eliminating challenge; how to dis-empower a player without trivializing agency and choice.
The relative merits of having a strongly pre-defined protagonist versus a cipher- either a character who can say nothing, and do nothing beyond a linear path (Gordon Freeman) or one who is created by the player but has limited opportunity to express individuality or agency within the context of the game (Saints Row, Skyrim, yes I know your mileage may vary.)
What eras and settings for video games remain largely unexplored? (Could you make a game about, say, the British vs. the Zulu that wouldn't become a political nightmare for everyone involved?)
As to the OP:
My guess is Antman, Dr. Strange, and Avengers 2. After that, I think they would be wise to do a Black Widow movie, particularly if one of the above proves to be a failure.
What is the appeal of any local grain-based mush? It's a warm, filling starch into which other things can be added for additional flavor. Oatmeal, cream of wheat, polenta, rice porridge, whatever. Though I do have a recipe for grits with cream and smoked mozzarella that would knock your socks off.
I'd be tempted to pick EA just to cut all the "pay now and pay later" initiatives off at the neck.
Patience, politeness, and hospitality; hopefully, my conduct doesn't make any of that seem out of question.
Baby seals are pretty darn cute, but off of the pictures I've seen recently, I might have to give the vote to baby hedgehogs.