Scott Fisher’s “Dangerous Game” reduces life to risk without instruction, a rocking pop framing where the metaphor does all the work and nothing softens its edge. The title lands as a statement rather than an idea, placing the listener inside a world where participation already implies exposure. There is no setup beyond that premise; the song positions itself as a recognition, not a discovery.
Calling life a dangerous game suggests rules, strategy, maybe even winners, yet the framing withholds all of that, leaving only the sense of consequence. The listener is asked to accept the stakes without being told how they operate. That absence becomes the centre, the song does not build complexity around the idea, it repeats it, letting the phrase carry more weight each time it returns, as if repetition could substitute for explanation.






