end me
Account Details | |
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SteamID64 | 76561198059177902 |
SteamID3 | [U:1:98912174] |
SteamID32 | STEAM_0:0:49456087 |
Country | Canada |
Signed Up | August 7, 2014 |
Last Posted | January 5, 2023 at 1:48 PM |
Posts | 896 (0.2 per day) |
Game Settings | |
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In-game Sensitivity | 3.15 |
Windows Sensitivity | |
Raw Input | 1 |
DPI |
1000 |
Resolution |
16x9 |
Refresh Rate |
60 hz |
Hardware Peripherals | |
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Mouse | HP USB 3-Button Optical |
Keyboard | KWD 855 |
Mousepad | Roccat Taito King-Size 5mm |
Headphones | HyperX Cloud III White/Pink |
Monitor | HP 2310 LCD |
AdasWrathPS: This thread needs to be dumpstered.
http://i.imgur.com/EC4lbxB.png
http://i.imgur.com/uP0RGx0.png
not it
ondkajahttps://clips.twitch.tv/ElegantSuperDuckCeilingCat
http://i.imgur.com/uOrGMbX.png
EDIT: https://clips.twitch.tv/ResoluteSmellyKimchiBCouch HE GENUINELY COULDN'T TELL FUCK MY LIFE
There are many moments I long to experience again when it comes to ESA Rewind and this is by no means the best or most memorable in my TF2 life, but before the Grand Finals, there was a point where I was on a break from editing/taking photos and was sitting down in the front row to watch Se7en. When me and the Ready Up boys arrived a few days early to film, we witnessed plenty from them. We saw this team struggle, up close and personal, during boot camp. We had shared drinks and conversation after their training. We cheered right with them when they managed to secure semis.
Getting to know the players/people involved in the org, I'm more biased than most. I remember reviewing the semis footage Dashner filmed when I flew back home. The knowledge of how the Grand Finals went down stung when I first watched it, but I couldn't help but laugh and feel happy too because of how happy Se7en were, screaming and bouncing in their seats. Kaidus jumping in the air as he pumped his fists while Fribs cheered wildly too, Gubbins throwing his arms enthusiastically around Stark, Drackk, and AMS to congratulate them.
But live at the event, I watched those players stand up from their chairs. They grouped up, threw their arms around each other, and huddled. I really wish I had been filming or had snapped a shot, like I had my phone but I basically missed my window of opportunity in terms of archiving it. I wasn't the only one who saw it either. It seemed and probably was very melodramatic, but that's just how it works. After all of what I saw them go through for boot camp before their most important match of the night - as they broke off with a shout, sat back down and put their headsets on before the Grand Finals - I was truly happy for them.
sage78AlfieCan a rule be made for talking non-English during a pug?Gosh, there are MORE languages than English in Europe? GOODNESS gracious me, if only there was a way to fix that...
In all seriousness, if most of the players in the pug team speak french or another language, i don't see whats wrong with that
Because it's bad etiquette. Context matters, of course (e.g. somebody translating, non-malicious closed conversation) but otherwise it's incredibly alienating if English is being used as a universal language of communication within the context. In this case, you're trying to communicate with all your teammates. Even if it's easier with, as aforementioned as an example in the thread, a 4-2 ratio of French-English, the 2 people that can't understand French are kind of fucked.
Speaking as somebody raised in a family where English was not the first language, the rule of thumb was to avoid speaking a language in front of somebody who doesn't speak or understand it. This was in case you came off as though you're talking about the person who can't understand what you're saying, or if you came off as you maliciously or deliberately didn't want them involved in your conversation. In the presence of guests who don't speak Tagalog, my family will speak English, even if they're talking to each other, in front of those guests.