not any bike, its a 10k euro bikeSo much drama over a bike.Enjoy your new bike, Andrei.
Oh my god that shit's so lame. Installed it and it's running at like 15 frames per second. Game came out in what, 2009? It looks like a pixellated 2005 game and it runs at a BARELY playable framerate? What the hell did they do, emulate this with the shittiest emulator in existence and just bundled it up without even caring?Meh,mostly getting it for the eye candy.
FF XIII failed so hard,now that's a real console port,can't even change the settings
I can live with a shitty game since I can insta delete it if it's garbage but dat 55GB download doe. nope nope nope nopeOh my god that shit's so lame. Installed it and it's running at like 15 frames per second. Game came out in what, 2009? It looks like a pixellated 2005 game and it runs at a BARELY playable framerate? What the hell did they do, emulate this with the shittiest emulator in existence and just bundled it up without even caring?
Such a goddamn disgrace.
It's not your fault that you were raised in the city. But you also said that you don't have respect for them which is probably why he decided to humiliate you. Basically, there's a big difference between telling him "I didn't grow up with traditions" and "I didn't grow up with traditions, and I think they're dumb". You tried to be a smartass, and he taxed you for it.In high-school there was a surprise test after the holidays. Prof told us to write about "traditions and customs", assuming we all had a countryside relatives' house (where these things are commonplace) and went there.
I had no such thing, stayed home all winter, and knew jack shit about romanian traditions and customs. So I decided instead of trying to write some half-assed essay praising the traditions I barely knew, I'd write an honest piece with my opinion of them. I didn't like them, didn't care about them, and didn't respect them.
I got a 2 and a public humiliation which consisted of the prof reading the first part of my essay out loud and laughing his ass off, prompting the class to laugh as well.
It was an opinion piece, not a documentary. I wouldn't have much to say if I just wrote "well, I didn't grow up with peasant customs so BEATS ME".It's not your fault that you were raised in the city. But you also said that you don't have respect for them which is probably why he decided to humiliate you. Basically, there's a big difference between telling him "I didn't grow up with traditions" and "I didn't grow up with traditions, and I think they're dumb". You tried to be a smartass, and he taxed you for it.
Here's the thing about traditions. They're important. Sure, one might argue that there can be negative aspects to them as well, depending of course on what certain traditions we're talking about. For example, your parents cutting your dick's foreskin without your consent when you're a baby is not so much a tradition as it is child abuse. Now that we got that out of the way, let's talk about why traditions are important. Traditions provide a source of identity - a sense of community. Tradition strengthens the bonds within that community, which is always nice to have. Traditions add to the rhythm and seasonality of life - I don't know about you, but I don't think there's anything that made me happier when I was a kid than knowing that Christmas was coming. Not because of the gifts, I'd get gifts on my birthday as well, but because of the atmosphere which I adored. They created lasting memories for me. They connect the generations - gives the father one more thing to pass on to his son, so that him may one day pass it on to his children. A lot of good comes from tradition.