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Comments
Interesting, I'd guess?
>2012
>Using reference jokes to make a point
> greentexting with bluetext
> lolololol
Hey glenn, do you still have that video of the guy clearing Sacred Grounds with the level 3 Nemesis?
seizure warning yo
alkthash with first guardian powers?
that's a scary thought
@Eelektross:
D&D 5e playtesting stuff has just been mailed out.
Also, we finished Tootsie in English. I thought that was a pretty fun movie.
Pretty much the story of my life right there, chum.
ETA: Apparently, this morning's "Dio feelings morning".
I wrapped the bracelet I made for my mom's birthday in a poster tube. She will never guess what's in there.
Officially signed up for the D&D Next Playtest. Once I've graduated and am officially done with any and all schoolwork until college, I'd be down for a brief adventure to test the system out. Would anyone be interested in something like that?
^^^
Maybe a random question, but would you be interested if I made an Eurovision thread in the 26th?
Go ahead!
Tutoree was a no-show again. I know he never confirmed that he could come, but he should at least have responded to one of the two times I asked him whether he could meet at 6 PM.
Now I have over half an hour to kill before a meeting. I don't have my computer with me, so no watching anime or learning to program or anything like that. I have paper and a calculator. And a pen. IJBM, what do?
...alternatively, I can spend my time on the phone with my mom.
Deleted.
> April 1st
welp
That feeling when you read a book that you'd know someone (Alex, in this case), would kill for, but it's written in a language that they can't understand.
So many books like that. ;~;
Don't worry, it probably ought to be translated to English relatively soon. It has been out for less than three months. I'll make sure to inform you if it does.
What's the book about?
It's called "Duge noći i crne zastave" ("Long Nights and Black Banners"), and it is a historical novel with low fantasy elements, set in the 1386. Serbia. It received rave reviews, and is supposed to be the first part of a quadrilogy consisting of, beside it, "The Stormy Keep", "The Swordmaster" and "Heavenly Empire".
The synopsis goes as this, basically: Serbia is under constant attack by Ottoman raiding parties. In one such raid, a mysterious reliquary which use is known only to Prince Lazar Hrebeljanović, is stolen and being carried to Constantinople. In order to find and intercept the shipment, the prince sends two knights of the Order of the Dragon (which I am sure you know about), Milan Toplica ("the big guy") and Ivan Kosančić ("the smart guy"), who are soon joined by Miloš Obilić, a brash, young knight bent on marrying the prince's daughter. Following the trail of the robbers, they come upon an antiquary rumored to be in a pact with demons, which launches them into something way stranger than any of them expected. Meanwhile, a huge Ottoman army marshalled by the sultan himself begins an attack on the border fortress of Pirot, led by the borderline psychotic captain Lazar Musić, who would rather let the entire population of the fortress die than surrender. The trio is in a race against time, and has to find the reliquary before the fortress falls.
Even though it may seem so from the synopsis, the book is anything but a cheap adventure novel. It's, on ocassions, surprisingly deep, offering a critical, honest, view of the period and the way we view history, as well as well-researched, with a lot of attention going to realistically portraying the three knights, theirideals and motivations and even their combat techniques and what they meant to them.
Ah, Eurovision.
The local gay bar didn't sign up for charity event gig organized in the city because the whole bar's going to be watching the finale on that date. It's weird to see a stereotype you've only encountered in sketches come alive in front of you.
You know what they say, every stereotype has some basis in truth.
Maaaaan, so many impatient ingrates over on Twitter and the Wizards forums, upset that the download link for D&D Next is having issues, even though it's probably their faults for flooding said pages with activity.
Going into it, I wasn't really sure how I'd feel. I kind of thought that it might just be way overhyped. And it kind of is, I guess, but when you have a fanbase that big, it's pretty inevitable. I was kind of afraid that being on Nick would mean that there would be annoying comic relief ruining cool or serious moments.
But holy shit, it completely just destroyed my expectations. I love the characters ('specially Aang and Sokka), the action is about a million times more fuckawesome than I expected, and it's kind of refreshing to see a kid's show like this that isn't afraid to be serious or acknowledge death or have actual continuity.
so yeah
My only real problem so far is Zuko. I mean, he's an interesting character, but jesus christ that voice
guys
guys
i think i'm undergoing a caffeine crash
someone help me
please
i don't wanna go to sleep
hey kid
i have some coke that'll keep you in the roof