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The Flood / Your Favorite Quotes from your favorite characters
« on: December 19, 2017, 10:30:26 PM »
"I am the Bomb Squad." - Bomb Squad from Bomb Squad 2
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The Flood / Your Favorite Quotes from your favorite characters« on: December 19, 2017, 10:30:26 PM »
"I am the Bomb Squad." - Bomb Squad from Bomb Squad 2
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Serious / President Trump Threatens to Send Troops Into Mexico« on: February 01, 2017, 09:29:42 PM »
Apparently our good ol' boys might be sent to stop Mexico's "bad hombres" unless President (Pinche Culero) Peña Nieto does something about it.
http://time.com/4657474/donald-trump-enrique-pena-nieto-mexico-bad-hombres/ Mexican-American War Part II when? 3
The Flood / So the UN removed Wonder Woman from being an ambassador after...« on: December 14, 2016, 01:37:52 PM »
Feminazis cried a massive river about it for the dumbest of reasons. What the fuck?
http://news.trust.org/item/20161212211854-nwpmx/?source=gep 7
The Flood / Favorite Divine?« on: April 05, 2016, 10:34:43 PM »
And if you say "Talos isn't a god" I will personally strike you where you stand, milkdrinker.
Friggin elves. 8
Gaming / I Guess He Couldn't BEAR The Criticism« on: March 08, 2016, 01:26:23 AM »YouTube That guy got grizzled by Pewdiepie...of all people! 9
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia "Kamchatka" redirects here. For other uses, see Kamchatka (disambiguation).[/size]Kamchatka Peninsula[/font][/size] полуо́стров Камча́тка[/font][/size] Kamchatka Peninsula in the far east of Russia. The pink area is the Kamchatka Krai which includes some of the mainland to the north.[/size][/font][/size] Geography Location[/t]Far East[/color] Coordinates[/t]57°N 160°E[/font][/size][/color] Coordinates: 57°N 160°E[/size][/size][/size][/font][/size] Area[/t]270,000 km2 (100,000 sq mi)[/color] Highest elevation[/t]4,750 m (15,580 ft)[/color] Highest point[/t]Klyuchevskaya Sopka[/color] Sovereign states Russia[/b][/size][/font][/size] Federal subject[/t]Kamchatka Krai[/color]Geography Topography of the Kamchatka Peninsula Views of Kamchatka from space in early summer (left) and late winter (right). Note the sea ice paralleling the coastline.Politically, the peninsula forms part of Kamchatka Krai. The southern tip is called Cape Lopatka. The circular bay to the north of this on the Pacific side is Avacha Bay with the capital, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. North up the Pacific side, the four peninsulas are called Shipunsky Point, Kronotsky Point, Kamchatsky Point and Ozernoy Point. North of Ozernoy is the large Karaginsky Bay, which features Karaginsky Island. Northeast of this (off the displayed map) lies Korfa Bay with the town of Tilichiki. On the opposite side is the Shelikhov Gulf. The Kamchatka or Central (Sredinny) Range forms the spine of the peninsula. Along the southeast coast runs the Vostochny or Eastern Range. Between these lies the central valley. The Kamchatka River rises northwest of Avacha and flows north down the central valley, turning east near Klyuchi to enter the Pacific south of Kamchatsky Point at Ust-Kamchatsk. In the nineteenth century a trail led west from near Klychi over the mountains to the Tegil river and town which was the main trading post on the west coast. North of Tegil is Koryak Okrug. South of the Tegil is the Icha River. Just south of the headwaters of the Kamchatka, the Bistraya River curves southwest to enter the Sea of Okhotsk at Bolsheretsk, which once served as a port connecting the peninsula to Okhotsk. South of the Bistraya flows the Golygina River. There is a road from Bolsheretsk to Petropavlovsk and another from this road up the central valley (with a bus service) to Ust-Kamchatsk. The northern end of the road is of poorer quality. Apart from the two roads, transport is by small plane, helicopter, four-wheel drive truck and army truck. The obvious circular area in the central valley is the Klyuchevskaya Sopka, an isolated volcanic group southeast of the curve of the Kamchatka River. West of Kronotsky Point is theKronotsky Biosphere Reserve with the Valley of Geysers. At the southern tip is the Southern Kamchatka Wildlife Refuge with Kurile Lake. There are several other protected areas: Palana is located in the Koryak area on the northwest coast.[/size]Climate[edit][/size]Although Kamchatka lies at similar latitudes to Great Britain, cold arctic winds from Siberia combined with the cold Oyashio sea current see the peninsula covered in snow from October to late May. Under the Köppen climate classification Kamchatka generally has a subarctic climate (Dfc) but higher and more northerly areas have a polar climate (ET). Kamchatka is much wetter and milder than eastern Siberia, and is essentially transitional from the hypercontinental climate of Siberia and northeast China to the rain-drenched subpolar oceanic climate of the Aleutian Islands. Opala volcano in the southern part of Kamchatka.There is considerable variation, however, between the rain-drenched and heavily glaciated east coast and the drier and more continental interior valley. In the heavily glaciated Kronotsky Peninsula, where maritime influences are most pronounced, annual precipitation can reach as high as 2,500 millimetres (98 in), whilst the southeast coast south of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky generally receives around 1,350 millimetres (53 in) of rainfall equivalent per year. Considerable local variations exist: southern parts of the Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky metropolitan area can receive as much as 430 millimetres (17 in) more than the northern part of the city. Temperatures here are very mild, with summer maxima no higher than 15 °C (59 °F) and winter lows around −8 °C (18 °F), whilst diurnal temperature ranges seldom exceed 5˚C (9˚F) due to persistent fog on exposed parts of the coast. South of 57˚N there is no permafrost due to the relatively mild winters and heavy snow cover, whilst northward discontinuous permafrost prevails. The west coastal plain has a similar climate, though rather drier with precipitation ranging from 880 millimetres (35 in) in the south to as little as 430 millimetres (17 in) in the north, where winter temperatures become considerably colder at around −20 °C (−4 °F).[/size][/size][/size] Capital and largest city[/t]Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky[/color] Demographics Population[/t]322,079The Kamchatka Peninsula ([/color]Russian: полуо́стров Камча́тка, Poluostrov Kamchatka) is a 1,250-kilometre-long (780 mi) peninsula in the Russian Far East, with an area of about 270,000 km2 (100,000 sq mi).[/color][1] It lies between the [/color]Pacific Ocean to the east and the Sea of Okhotsk to the west.[/color][2] Immediately offshore along the Pacific coast of the peninsula runs the 10,500-metre (34,400-ft) deep [/color]Kuril–Kamchatka Trench. The Kamchatka Peninsula, the Commander Islands, and Karaginsky Island constitute the Kamchatka Krai of the Russian Federation. The vast majority of the 322,079 inhabitants are ethnic Russians, but there are also about 13,000 Koryaks (2014).[/color][3] More than half of the population lives in [/color]Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky (179,526 people in 2010) and nearby Yelizovo (38,980). The Kamchatka peninsula contains the volcanoes of Kamchatka, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Kamchatka receives up to 2,700 mm (110 in) of precipitation per year. The summers are moderately cool, and the winters tend to be rather stormy though rarely producing lightning. Contents [[/color]hide] [/color] 1Geography[/size][/font][/size] 1.1Climate[/size][/font][/size] 1.2Geology, earthquakes and volcanoes[/size][/font][/size] [/li][/list] 2History and exploration[/size][/font][/size] 3Terrestrial flora[/size][/font][/size] 4Terrestrial and aquatic fauna[/size][/font][/size] 5See also[/size][/font][/size] 6References[/size][/font][/size] 7Further reading[/size][/font][/size] 8External links[/size][/font][/size] [/list] Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky[/size][/size][/size] Climate chart (explanation)[/size][/size][/size] [/size] JFMAMJJASOND 69 −6−11 59 −5−10 52 −3−8 53 0−3 49 61 57 115 75 149 99 1510 100 126 133 72 81 0−4 98 −4−8 Average max. and min. temperatures in °C[/size][/size][/size][/size] Precipitation totals in mm[/size][/size][/size][/size] Source: [4][/size][/i][/size][/size][/size][/color] [/t] [/size] [show]Imperial conversion[/size][/size][/size][/size][/t] Klyuchi[/size][/size][/size] Climate chart (explanation)[/size][/size][/size] [/size] JFMAMJJASOND 80 −12−19 43 −10−17 41 −4−14 32 2−6 61 91 40 166 67 1910 78 189 63 134 63 6−2 43 −5−11 75 −11−17 Average max. and min. temperatures in °C[/size][/size][/size][/size] Precipitation totals in mm[/size][/size][/size][/size] Source: [5][/size][/i][/size][/size][/size][/color] [/t] [/size] [show]Imperial conversion[/size][/size][/size][/size][/t] The interior valley of the Kamchatka River, represented by Klyuchi, has much lower precipitation (at around 450 to 650 millimetres (18 to 26 in)) and significantly more continental temperatures, reaching 19 °C (66 °F) on a typical summer day and during extreme cold winter spells falling as low as −41 °C (−42 °F). Sporadic permafrost prevails over the lower part of this valley, but it becomes more widespread at higher altitudes and glaciers, and continuous permafrost prevails north of 55˚N. The summer months, when maximum temperatures range from 15 to 20 °C (59 to 68 °F), are popular with tourists, but a growing trend in winter sports keeps tourism pulsing year-round. The volcanoes and glaciers play a role in forming Kamchatka's climate, and hot springs have kept alive dozens of species decimated during the last ice-age.[/size][6][/size]Geology, earthquakes and volcanoes[edit][/size] The lake-filled Akademia Naukcaldera, seen here from the north withKarymsky volcano in the foreground.[/size]UNESCO World Heritage Site[/b][/size][/size][/size] Volcanoes of Kamchatka[/size] [size=0px]Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List[/size][/size][/size][/size] Koryaksky Volcano rising above Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy[/t][/c][/size][/size][/size][/color] Type[/t]Natural Criteria[/t]vii, viii, ix, x Reference[/t]765 [size=0px]UNESCO region[/size][/t]Asia[/size][/size][/color] Inscription history[/t][/color][/color] Inscription[/t]1996 (20th Session) Extensions[/t]2001 Main article: Volcanoes of KamchatkaThe Kamchatka River and the surrounding central side valley are flanked by large volcanic belts containing around 160 volcanoes, 29 of them still active. The peninsula has a high density of volcanoes and associated volcanic phenomena, with 19 active volcanoes included in the six UNESCO World Heritage List sites in the Volcanoes of Kamchatka group, most of them on the Kamchatka Peninsula, the most volcanic area of the Eurasian continent, with many active cones. The Kamchatka Peninsula is also known as the "land of fire and ice".[7][/size] The highest volcano is Klyuchevskaya Sopka (4,750 m or 15,584 ft), the largest active volcano in the Northern Hemisphere,[/size][8][/size] while the most striking is Kronotsky: volcanologists Robert and Barbara Decker regard its perfect cone as a prime candidate for the world's most beautiful volcano.[/size][citation needed[/i]][/size] Somewhat more accessible are the three volcanoes visible from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky: Koryaksky, Avachinsky, and Kozelsky. In the center of Kamchatka is Eurasia's world-famous[/size][weasel words[/i]][/size] Geyser Valley which was partly destroyed by a massive mudslide in June 2007.[/size][9][/size] Owing to the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, deep-focus seismic events and tsunamis occur fairly commonly. A pair of megathrust earthquakes occurred off the coast on October 16, 1737, and on November 4, 1952, with magnitudes of ~9.3 and 8.2 respectively.[/size][10][/size] A chain of more shallow earthquakes were recorded as recently as April 2006.[/size][11][/size] These volcanic features are the site of occurrence of certain extremophile micro-organisms that can survive in extremely hot environments.[/size][12][/size]History and exploration[edit][/font][/size][/font] Illustration from Stepan Krasheninnikov's Account of the Land of Kamchatka (1755) Three Brothers rocks in the Avacha Bay See also: Russian explorersWhen the Russian explorer Ivan Moskvitin reached the Sea of Okhotsk in 1639, further exploration was impeded by the lack of skills and equipment to build sea-going ships and by the harsh land to the northeast inhabited by the warlike Koryak people. Consequently, Russians entered Kamchatka from the north. In 1651, after having assisted in the foundation of the Anadyrsk ostrog, the explorer Mikhail Stadukhin went south and followed the coast of the Sea of Okhotsk from Penzhina Bay to Okhotsk. From about 1667 there were reports of a Kamchatka River to the south. Some time before 1700 a group of Russians were stranded and died on Kamchatka. In 1695 explorer Vladimir Atlasov became commander of Anadyrsk. In 1696 he sent the Cossack Luka Morozko south. Morozko got as far as the Tigil River and returned with reports and some mysterious writings, probably Japanese. In 1697–1699 Atlasov explored nearly the whole of the peninsula. He built an ostrog at Verkhny-Kamchatsk, rescued or captured a Japanese castaway, and went to Moscow to report. In 1699 the Russians at Verkhny-Kamchatsk were killed on their way back to Anadyrsk by the Koryaks. In 1700 a punitive expedition destroyed a Koryak village and founded Nizhne-Kamchatsk on the lower river. Bolskeretsk was founded in 1703. From about 1705 there was a breakdown of order. There were numerous mutinies and native wars all over the peninsula and north to the Koryak country of the Penzhina River and Olyutorsky Gulf. Several people were sent out to restore order, including Atlasov, who was murdered in 1711. Vasily Merlin restored some degree of order between 1733 and 1739. There was no significant resistance after 1756. A major smallpox epidemic that hit in 1768–1769 quickly decimated the native population; the roughly 2,500 Itelmens present in 1773 were reduced to 1,900 in 1820, from an original population of 12,000–25,000. Those who survived adopted Russian customs, and there was a great deal of intermarriage, such that "Kamchadal" (the original Russian name for the Itelmens) came to mean any Russian or part-Russian born on the peninsula. In 1713 Peter the Great sent shipbuilders to Okhotsk. A fifty-four-foot boat was built and sailed to the Tegil River in June 1716. This one-week journey, later redirected to Okhotsk-Bolseretsk, became the standard route to Kamchatka. In 1720 Ivan Yevreinov mapped Kamchatka and the Kurils. The Danish-born explorer Vitus Bering left Nezhe-Kamchatsk for his first voyage in 1728 and, as part of his second voyage, foundedPetropavlovsk-Kamchatsky in 1740. Temple of the Sacred Trinity in Petropavlovsk-KamchatskyVitus Bering's Second Kamchatka Expedition (ca 1733-1743), in the service of the Russian Navy, began the final "opening" of Kamchatka, helped by the fact that the government began to use the area to exile people, famously the Slovak explorer and rebel the Count de Benyovszky in 1770. In 1755 Stepan Krasheninnikov published the first detailed description of the peninsula, An Account of the Land of Kamchatka. The Russian government encouraged the commercial activities of the Russian-American Company by granting land to newcomers on the peninsula. By 1812 the indigenous population had fallen to less than 3,200 while the Russian population had risen to 2,500. In 1854 the French and British, who were battling Russian forces in the course of the Crimean War, attacked Petropavlovsk. During the Siege of Petropavlovsk, 988 men with a mere 68 guns managed to defend the outpost against 6 ships with 206 guns and 2,540 French and British soldiers. Despite the heroic defense, the Russians abandoned Petropavlovsk as a strategic liability after the French and British forces withdrew. The next year, when a second enemy force came to attack the port, they found it deserted. Frustrated, the ships bombarded the city and withdrew. On May 21, 1865, the American Civil War came to the area: the Confederate States Navy steamer Shenandoah sailed past the southern end of the Kamchatka Peninsula on its way to hunt United States whaling ships in the Sea of Okhotsk. As a commerce raider, the CSS Shenandoah aimed to destroy Yankee merchant shipping and thus draw off United States Navy ships in pursuit and thereby loosen the US Navy blockade of Confederate coasts. The ship spent almost three weeks in the Sea, destroying only one ship because of the dangerous ice, before moving on to the North Pacific where it virtually destroyed the North Pacific whaling fleet, capturing 24 whalers and sinking most of them. The next fifty years were lean ones for Kamchatka. The naval port moved to Ust-Amur, and in 1867 Russia sold Alaska to the United States, making Petropavlovsk obsolete as a transit point for traders and explorers on their way to the American territories. In 1860, a Primorsky (Maritime) Region was established[[/color]citation needed][/size] and Kamchatka was placed under its jurisdiction. In 1875 Russia ceded the [/color]Kuril Islands to Japan in return for Russian sovereignty over Sakhalin island. The Russian population of Kamchatka stayed at around 2,500 until the turn of the century, while the native population increased to 5,000. During the 19th century, scientific exploration of the peninsula continued, with Karl von Ditmar making an important journey there in 1851–1854.[/color][13] [/color]World War II (1939-1945) hardly affected Kamchatka except for its role as a launch site for the invasion of the Kurils in August 1945. After the war the Soviet authorities declared Kamchatka a military zone: it remained closed to Soviet citizens until 1989 and to foreigners until 1990.Terrestrial flora[/color][edit][/size][/font]Kamchatka boasts abundant flora. The variable climate promotes different flora zones where [/color]tundra and muskeg are dominant succeeded by grasses, flowering shrubs and forests of pine, birch, alder and willow. The wide variety of plant forms spread throughout the Peninsula promotes just as wide a variation in animal species that feed off them. Although Kamchatka is mostly tundra, deciduous and coniferous trees are abundant and forests can be found throughout the peninsula.Terrestrial and aquatic fauna[/color][edit][/size][/font] [/color]A Kamchatka brown bear in the spring Kamchatka Peninsula surrounded by algal bloom in 2013Kamchatka boasts diverse and abundant wildlife. This is due to climates ranging from temperate to subarctic, diverse topography and geography, many free-flowing rivers, proximity to highly productive waters from the northwestern Pacific Ocean and the Bering and Okhotsk Seas, and to the low human density and minimal development. It also boasts the southernmost expanse of Arctic tundra in the world. Commercial exploitation of marine resources and a history of fur trapping has taken its toll on several species. Kamchatka is famous for the abundance and size of its brown bears. In the Kronotsky Nature Preserve there are estimated to be three to four bears per 100 square kilometres.[/color][14] Other fauna of note include carnivores such as [/color]tundra wolf (Canis lupus albus), Arctic fox (Vulpes lagopus) Anadyr fox (Vulpes vulpes beringiana), East Siberian lynx (Lynx lynx wrangeli), wolverine (Gulo gulo), sable (Martes zibellina), Eurasian otter (Lutra lutra), East Siberian stoat (Mustela ermine kaneii) and Siberian least weasel (Mustela nivalis pygmaea). The peninsula hosts habitat for several large ungulates including the Kamchatka snow sheep,reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), and Chukotka moose (Alces alces burulini) one of the largest moose in the world and the largest in Eurasia; and rodents/leporids, including mountain hare (Lepus timidus), marmot, and several species of lemming and squirrel. The peninsula is the breeding ground for Steller's sea eagle,[/color][15] one of the largest eagle species, along with the [/color]golden eagle and gyr falcon. Kamchatka contains probably the world's greatest diversity of salmonid fish, including all six species of anadromous Pacific salmon (chinook, chum, coho, seema, pink, and sockeye). Due to its uniquely suitable environment, biologists estimate that a fifth of all Pacific salmon originates in Kamchatka.[/color][16] [/color]Kuril Lake is recognized as the biggest spawning-ground for sockeye in Eurasia.[/color][17] In response to pressure from poaching and to worldwide decreases in salmon stocks, some 24,000 square kilometres (9,300 sq mi) along nine of the more productive salmon rivers are in the process of being set aside as a nature preserve. Stickleback species, particularly [/color]Gasterosteus aculeatus and Pungitius pungitius, also occur in many coastal drainages, and are likely present in freshwater as well. Cetaceans that frequent the highly productive waters of the northwestern Pacific and the Okhotsk Sea include: orcas, Dall's and harbor porpoises, humpback whales, sperm whales and fin whales. Less frequently, gray whales (from the eastern population), the critically endangered North Pacific right whale and bowhead whale, beaked whales and minke whales are encountered. Blue whale are known to feed off of the southeastern shelf in summer. Among pinnipeds, Steller's sea lions, northern fur seals, spotted seals and harbor seals are abundant along much of the peninsula. Further north, walruses and bearded seals can be encountered on the Pacific side, and ribbon seals reproduce on the ice of Karaginsky Bay. Sea otters are concentrated primarily on the southern end of the peninsula. Seabirds include northern fulmars, thick and thin-billed murres, kittiwakes, tufted and horned puffins, red-faced, pelagic and other cormorants, and many other species. Typical of the northern seas, the marine fauna is likewise rich. Of commercial importance are Kamchatka crab (king crab), scallop, squid, pollock, cod, herring, halibut and several species of flatfish.See also[/color][edit][/size][/font][/color]Korean Air Lines Flight 007[/size][/size][/color] Maritime fur trade 10
The Flood / My Weekend With A Friend« on: February 22, 2016, 11:36:36 PM »
You know what the worst thing about besieging a hive for the Ruinous Gods is? It's not being forced to run at the hive so your bodies pile up high enough so your uncaring Traitor Astartes types can climb up you (and boy, when you're pinned under a pile of your dead comrades don't you ALWAYS get an itch?). No, it's the waiting.
We were into the sixth month of the Draxian Persecution. Hive Draxia Primary was this pretty huge hive that had somewhere along the line hopped onto the backside of a mining facility and never gotten off, burying halfway into this huge mountain that tried to race to the top. No biggie for the Red Rivers. They were going to hold us back until a small crack appeared in the defenses and then send us in to die in horrible droves. The Khorne guys in the army didn't take so well to that, and neither did Khârn. Big fella got really antsy after about the second minute of the siege, and the ball of yarn just wasn't working the way it used to when it came to distracting him. So we're just waiting for something to happen and Khârn grabs a bunch of us, and asks us politely to come with him. After screaming a little due to his polite request (he had charts about what he was going to do to the entire planet if we didn't. I don't know where he got the stationery), about fifty of the Rivers joined his party to ascend the Draxia Spire-Mountain. After ten days, three dares of "I bet you can't jump that gap", an avalanche caused by Khârn punching a mountain goat and almost all of us dying in horrible ways, we finally reached the summit of the mountain. Flat on top was that summit almost eerily so... like it had been hacked off by someone with a large axe. Anyway, we get there and what does Khârn do? Breaks out the marbles. I don't know, I don't know where he keeps getting these things. He challenges the last four of us to a game, and since we had nothing better to do we had a run of it. Three more fatalities later and it was clear I was going to win. Khârn just didn't have the patience for marbles. He could see my smiling and in return nodded his helmeted head as if to say "Just watch THIS shot, Smug McSmuggy" ... shortly before screaming "TRICK SHOT" and hurling his sole marble down the side of the mountain. We stood there in silence and watched as the marble plinked from sight, and a rather large amount of debris followed it. This debris loosened even more of it, and the entire mountain began to shake and tear away from the hive. Draxia Primary shuddered a moment, and then began to collapse. Neither of us looked away from the sheer destruction and loss of life that had just been wrought, and the sound of our respect knuckles tapping together and my entire arm dislocating in the aftershock were muffled even from the great height we were at. It took a further two days for things to settle, and through it all neither of us said a word. It was Khârn who broke the silence, that competitive look somehow burning from what little I could see of his crazed eyes set in his helmet, as he bent forwards simply so he could stare right into my face. I could see up his nose too. It was pretty gross. "RACE TO THE BOTTOM" Don't worry, Khârn made sure it was fair by giving me a head-start. Even pushed me hard enough that I cleared about half of the mountain. Medics are telling me that I should probably be dead instead of unable to move or feel my anything, but Khârn himself told me no one ever won a race by not landing head first in the twisted wreckage of humanity's folly. He's a deep guy. 11
The Flood / You're going to love this. Trust me.« on: February 06, 2016, 12:29:50 AM »What you're seeing now is my normal form. 12
The Flood / When You're Kakarot and see this guy in the street at night« on: January 27, 2016, 07:03:26 PM »14
The Flood / Question About SW: Episode VII« on: December 09, 2015, 07:49:15 PM »
Simple question really to those who know about Star Wars more than me, why apparently in the Force Awakens, has the Alliance not form a government (New Republic) after the fall of the Empire? They are still called the Resistance...how are they still a Resistance if the Empire fell? The First Order seems to fulfill the role of the Imperial Remnant from the old canon. So...why?
15
The Flood / UN Game: Fallout Edition II: Resource Wars« on: December 06, 2015, 01:02:35 PM »Welcome to another UN Game based in the Fallout universe. Unlike the previous Fallout UN Game this one will not focus on the post-Great War factions of the former USA, but instead focus on the events leading to the Great War, the grueling and extensive Resource Wars that led the world to ruin. And instead of small factions, this will follow standard UN Game nations, but the scenario is different. The world is not good to begin with: To start of, the world is on the brink of collapse, and there are nations competing for the last resources left on Planet Earth to continue functioning without ruining their economies and way of lives. These nations are: The United States of America The People's Republic of China The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) The European Commonwealth Saudi Arabia Players may choose other countries, that are not the ones listed above, that includes that are within the European Commonwealth (which are essentially the EU + the UK), and compete in the Resource Wars. Main objective is to out do the other nations in obtaining the natural resources of the Earth which include gasoline, oil, petrol, and the like. Every starts out with the standard of 1000 troops each, and may build from there the rest of their military power. All technological advances shown in the Fallout games and lore maybe be used, no limits. If the game leads to a nuclear exchange the game will be over with a definite loss for everyone involved so thing before pulling the trigger. Game Masters ask for invites. Anyone who chooses any other country please make a post about what nation you want to command and I'll add it to the list. USA: Deci China: USSR: Euro: SA: Greenland: Beetle Go! Go! Go! Game Masters: Korra 16
The Flood / What are you listening right now?« on: November 23, 2015, 06:35:00 PM »
Right now my ears are having an orgasm.
YouTube 18
Gaming / New Character Announced for SSB4« on: November 18, 2015, 11:08:44 PM »
It appears that Nintendo had been waiting a bit before revealing this new character. They said that it was going to be the best guest character yet!
Spoiler 20
The Flood / So if Trump actually wins« on: November 11, 2015, 08:00:51 PM »
And actually fixes the country...
How many ibuprofens will the liberals need for the massive butthurt that'll follow? 21
The Flood / Someone broke psy again« on: October 18, 2015, 01:11:24 PM »psyWho would eat meatbags raw though?Why would you take the word of a vampire? Obviously he just wants to get into your neck.oh whewnoyou're a cannibal?I mean if anything I'm getting dangerously close to the Lecter cliché.you're this close into becoming a vampireYou make it sound like I haven't alreadyyou need to see a psychologistAnything with blood in it e.e please no bitty my necky 22
The Flood / Whatcha watchin?« on: October 10, 2015, 09:45:27 PM »
Right now I'm watching the USA vs. Mexico Gold Cup match, they're tied 1-1 as of now. Go USA!!! WOOT WOOT
Edit: GODDAMMIT BEANERS Edit: USA FUCK YEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Edit: FUCK THIS SHIT 25
Serious / Oregon Umpqua Community College Shooting« on: October 01, 2015, 03:06:23 PM »
http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/01/us/oregon-college-shooting/
Quote (CNN)[Breaking news, posted at 3:53 p.m. ET] Its as if one of these happens bimonthly. Police already searching through the shooter's social media profiles for clues. 28
The Flood / Daily reminder that Spider-man is the best hero ever« on: August 31, 2015, 07:42:06 PM »ayy lmao 30
Let's say that because of some convoluted cosmic reasons you have been given godhood. You have both the power and immorality comparable to that of an omnipotent deity.
What will you with such abilities? Will your ideals change? What would you do to us puny mortals? |