Hands free dash mount?
Hands free dash mount?
Mount and Blade 2: Bannerlord. There is a small background storyline that you can choose to follow, or completely ignore. When I play, I create a story in my head.
Thanks, now I’m hungry for some gyudong
I was on a regional kid’s show as an on-screen audience member, 37 years ago, called Ramblin Rod. My life has been forever changed.
Have you ever seen office space? Peter’s answer or his neighbor’s answer. Probably both.
Every once in awhile I remind my wife that, “everyone needs a bosom for a pillow.”
I fought it at first, but I’m so glad I finally gave in. It really is so much more intuitive.
I worked apartment management for years, and this image is a drop in a bucket to some of the horrors I’ve seen in dumpster areas. All it would take is one person leaving their garbage on the side like this, usually a kid that couldn’t lift the lid, and every single person after, like a sheep, followed suit. They assumed that the dumpster was full because garbage was piled in front.
Pixel 6 pro with Nova for over a year now. I’ve had zero issues, and I use gesture navigation.
Two tickets to Star Wars, please
We have a killer birria restaurant down the street. They serve it traditionally, as well as with ramen noodles, the latter is truly life changing.
Yeah, you blew into the cartridge, not the NES itself.
Imagine owning a farm where you grow the same crop as your neighbor’s farm, the only difference is that you’re using natural seeds, but your neighbor is using genetically modified seeds that were licensed from a mega corp. Wind comes along and your neighbor’s plants cross pollinate with yours, you know, nature being nature. Guess what, you’re now being sued by the mega corp for stealing their IPO.
The band Sparks changed every 7 years or so for almost the past 50 years
I loved Hyperion, I’m thinking about rereading it. The original Dune has been my favorite since I was 13 years old. I’m going to get flayed alive for saying this, but I honestly enjoyed most of the prequels his son and Kevin J. Anderson wrote.