Do you want the title race to go down to the wire? Do you want a five-team fight? Do you want a seven-team play-off?
The final day of the League Two season is this Saturday.
What could happen is explained by the BBC Sport.
If you think Manchester City supporters have it hard, think again, because their 14-point lead overLiverpool at the top of the Premier League has been cut to just one.
They were 11 points clear at the top of League Two after their draw at Sutton United.
The title rivals were 16 points behind each other with a game in hand, but what has happened since has been remarkable.
Since the start of February, the Grecians have won 13 and drawn four of their 19 games, while Rovers have only won once in their past six matches.
It shows a 17 point swing in favour of the Devon side.
It was the second great stretch of results this season, the first being a 19-game run that ended in November and kept them away from the top spot.
The majority of the rest of the league were playing for second and third place, and that was what we had resigned ourselves to, according to Matt Taylor.
We have been concentrating on our own form, our own performances and the amount of points we have picked up.
Forest Green might say they have had a bit of an indifferent finish to the season, but their job was done a couple of months ago, they only needed a few more points to guarantee promotion.
Forest Green know a first-ever English Football League title to go along with a maiden promotion to League One is out of their hands.
They have to hope that they don't lose to Vale and that they draw or win at Mansfield.
In terms of results, it has been harder over the last few months, according to Forest Green manager Rob Edwards.
I think one of the reasons is a psychological side, where it is difficult to achieve something, and we have seen that up and down the country.
I don't think we should be critical. We have to make sure that we learn and we are better going into next season.
The title race is pretty simple, but who gets the third automatic promotion place behind Forest Green and Exeter is a mystery.
On paper, Northampton are the favorites because they travel to a fourth-from-bottom Barrow side with nothing to play for and have a five-goal advantage over Bristol Rovers.
Jon Brady told Radio Northampton that the game was going to be a tough one.
The teams are very even in League Two. It has been the same throughout the entire season, so for any team in the top 10 that has done well, it is because it is such a tough league.
Some people don't understand what it takes in a 46-game season to keep the output high and consistency levels strong. To be in the top 10, you have to be very strong, your players have to be fit and committed.
All bets are off if the Cobblers slip up.
On paper, a win should be straightforward against a side who have tasted victory just four times all season and only once away from Glanford Park.
It might not be as simple as it seems for Joey Barton's men, as they might want to go out on a high.
If either side slips up, then Port Vale or Swindon could do the same.
"I just hope it is not us, because somebody is going to miss out."
It is unbelievable how it worked out on the final day. It is as exciting as any league in the country.
A point or three will guarantee a play-off spot. We need to focus on that.
The Stags and Valiants have tough games against the top two, while seventh-ranked Swindon travel to 15th-ranked Walsall.
So could the team who only had a handful of players at the start of the season, who are now owned by an Australian businessman, win for a fifth time in six games and claim an unlikely promotion place?
They would need to win in the West Midlands, hope Northampton and Bristol Rovers both lose, and that Port Vale and Mansfield both drop points.
After winning the National League title and entering the English Football League for the first time, the team celebrated.
Their first season in the top 92 has already seen them reach Wembley where they suffered a heartbreaking extra-time loss to League One side Rotherham United in the Papa John's Trophy final, but they could return to north London again.
The south London side travel to 17th-ranked Harrogate knowing they must win to have any chance of avoiding the drop points.
If any of the sides from Port Vale slip up then Tranmere could find themselves in the mix, as long as they win against Orient and Port Vale lose.
It is a unique situation, a situation I have not been involved in before with so many teams on the last day of the season.
If we put three points on the board, we will get 76 points. I don't know what my statistics are, but I know that it hasn't happened in the last decade for a team that has finished with 76 in League Two.
If we get 76 and we miss out, we have done everything possible and we have had an unbelievable season and put an amazing points tally on the board.
I still believe that we have a chance of getting into the play-offs if we put 76 points on.
It will be an exciting end to the season, so make sure you have your calculator on hand to work out all those permutations.