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Remi
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chang told me to join so i did

I found it very schizophrenic.

It would have really good moments followed by bits that felt phoned in. The banter with the glove seemed to have not been double checked because there was at least one instance where the characters were talking about a subject they've already talked about but the bits were obviously out of order. I also did not appreciate all corpses looking exactly the same in the exact same clothing. The subtitles did not display sometimes (I played in Russian). Zombies suddenly appearing was an extremely odd choice and even odder was the cast's nonchalant reaction to it, odder still was the choice to give the giant tree boss googly eyes.

Still better than BioShock. I'll finish it eventually.

When you see psychotic kikes on Twitter, or even in positions of power, who are crowing for nuclear armament of Ukraine, or even striking Russia first, just remember that the reason they're so vicious towards Russia is the same reason they're vicious towards YOU. They would in a heartbeat inflict upon Russia worse tragedies than what is written above. And they'd do it to you too.

Testimony of Atomic Bomb survivors published by Time Magazine.

Remember, shitlibs cheer for this. "They deserved it."

>YASUJIRO TANAKA

>“I was three years old at the time of the bombing. I don’t remember much, but I do recall that my surroundings turned blindingly white, like a million camera flashes going off at once.

>Then, pitch darkness.

>I was buried alive under the house, I’ve been told. When my uncle finally found me and pulled my tiny three year old body out from under the debris, I was unconscious. My face was misshapen. He was certain that I was dead.

>Thankfully, I survived. But since that day, mysterious scabs began to form all over my body. I lost hearing in my left ear, probably due to the air blast. More than a decade after the bombing, my mother began to notice glass shards growing out of her skin – debris from the day of the bombing, presumably. My younger sister suffers from chronic muscle cramps to this day, on top of kidney issues that has her on dialysis three times a week. ‘What did I do to the Americans?’ she would often say, ‘Why did they do this to me?’

>I have seen a lot of pain in my long years, but truthfully, I have lived a good life. As a firsthand witness to this atrocity, my only desire is to live a full life, hopefully in a world where people are kind to each other, and to themselves.”

>“You are only given One life, So cherish this moment Cherish this day, Be kind to others, Be kind to yourself”

I pray for his safety and also I'm surrendering

Know nothing of Thai politics but BBC celebrating a left-wing party winning over a military coalition thanks to an outpouring of "young voters demanding change" reeks of CIA.

bbc.com/news/world-asia-65567781