I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
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MaddocI'm Bobbin Threadbare, are you my mother?Registered Userregular
Look you can put gravy and melty cheese curds on basically anything and I'll eat it
Fries, chips, broken glass, an apple, a live chicken, whatever
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
A rat would understand the vital importance of the squeak, so this tracks.
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
A rat would understand the vital importance of the squeak, so this tracks.
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
Barbecue
Hmmm yes, even in America it's difficult to find good barbecue in certain areas.
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
TexMex/CaliMex
Mexican food in general seems to be a thing that some foreign cultures (or at least more than one individual that I have personally met) are basically totally unaware of. Every one of the Japanese exchange students hosted by my ex's family didn't have a clue about Mexican cuisine, not even tacos. They just called tacos American food. I know a German exchange student my young brother hung out with didn't know anything outside of tacos.
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Der Waffle MousBlame this on the misfortune of your birth.New Yark, New Yark.Registered Userregular
so Waypoint Radio has spun off its waypoints section into it's own weekly podcast (same feed). I'm into it as I definitely appreciate more podcast from them.
And of course Rob's thing in the first episode is extremely on brand
I will not eat poutine in America unless it's been cosigned by five different Canadian experts but in Quebec I'd eat poutine that was offered to me by a rat on the subway.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
TexMex/CaliMex
Mexican food in general seems to be a thing that some foreign cultures (or at least more than one individual that I have personally met) are basically totally unaware of. Every one of the Japanese exchange students hosted by my ex's family didn't have a clue about Mexican cuisine, not even tacos. They just called tacos American food. I know a German exchange student my young brother hung out with didn't know anything outside of tacos.
Myself and my fellow dorm parents made Mexican food for our Chinese boarding students. The looks of complete confusion when they finished making their soft tacos and found our trays of nachos were just beautiful. :tell_me_more:
"No you don't have to put them in the taco! They're just chips with stuff on them!"
I appreciate that the suicide mission lets you get the best possible outcome
doing it perfectly is one of the most satisfying things ive done in games
The problem for me id thst ME3 doesnt support it
half the characters have nothing to do to the point where its farcical, theyre just gonna stand here and not join your team... because
and also it is one of the biggest reasons the ending doesnt work: shepherd perfectly pulls this off, but in 3 even if you have max readiness and negotiate treaties perfectly you still cant properly solve the problem, which feels at odds with the expectations 2 gives you
this is actually a problem with 3 being a whack story, not a fault with mass effect 2
exist on
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Indie Winterdie KräheRudi Hurzlmeier (German, b. 1952)Registered Userregular
this popped up in my youtube recs
there are many GB compilations but I'm a sucker for Eurovision
I like that kasumi in me3 says look, shepard, the suicide mission was a fuckin psychologically traumatizing event and I can't do that again, I'm just a thief
I appreciate that the suicide mission lets you get the best possible outcome
doing it perfectly is one of the most satisfying things ive done in games
The problem for me id thst ME3 doesnt support it
half the characters have nothing to do to the point where its farcical, theyre just gonna stand here and not join your team... because
and also it is one of the biggest reasons the ending doesnt work: shepherd perfectly pulls this off, but in 3 even if you have max readiness and negotiate treaties perfectly you still cant properly solve the problem, which feels at odds with the expectations 2 gives you
It's a bummer that those characters aren't more present in ME3, but given the realties of making a game like Mass Effect 3, where you have to account for all of the crazy number of different things that could have happened, it's kind of a miracle that they got the spotlights they did have in ME3.
And the stakes in ME3 are significantly different than the stakes in ME2. I don't think the problem is necessarily that you can't prepare enough to complete perfectly with zero losses; I think it might be that there's not really much of a visible scale as to how well you've done. In ME2 you know that it's building up to a mission where people might die unless you prep extensively, so that's always hanging over you. Everything's a bit more abstract in ME3's ending, as far as what resources are being brought in, so you don't get those panicked moments of "oh shit, Tali might bite it here."
But that's only in the ending of ME3. I think the entire game of ME3 ends up having the same feel as the suicide run, in that you're making tough choices and they're impacted by the work you've done leading up to it, and you know that the results are largely on you. The perfect "suicide run" in ME3 is stuff like, "I came through this with both of these races intact and ready to go." And even though I'm a bigger fan of the ending than most, I do wish the impact of those choices had more of an impact on the close of it beyond "an abstract number went up."
I feel like I had never seen so much poutine in my life than when I was at PAX. I even mentioned something to the effect of "it seems like every bar here has poutine now".
Lo and behold, I get back to SF and I've seen it at least twice now.
As if gravy itself is gradually flowing down from the north, it's spreading
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Gravy on fries all the fucking time, but no one ever gets the cheese out.
I don't like gravy on fries but I tried to sell my mom and brother on poutine and they looked at me like I was a crazy person.
Fries, chips, broken glass, an apple, a live chicken, whatever
A rat would understand the vital importance of the squeak, so this tracks.
Steam ID - VeldrinD | SS Post | Wishlist
BOOOOOO
I was about to say those look suspiciously like mcdonalds fries.
Ok but what's one food you'd eat offered to you by a rat in America but would not eat in Quebec unless it were cosigned by five different American experts?
Barbecue
TexMex/CaliMex
I’ve never had poutine
I didn't eat that with my hands, either.
Hmmm yes, even in America it's difficult to find good barbecue in certain areas.
Mexican food in general seems to be a thing that some foreign cultures (or at least more than one individual that I have personally met) are basically totally unaware of. Every one of the Japanese exchange students hosted by my ex's family didn't have a clue about Mexican cuisine, not even tacos. They just called tacos American food. I know a German exchange student my young brother hung out with didn't know anything outside of tacos.
Patented gnomefries. old family recipe.
it used gravy for the sauce
PSN: Robo_Wizard1
And of course Rob's thing in the first episode is extremely on brand
PSN: Robo_Wizard1
Steam // Secret Satan
Myself and my fellow dorm parents made Mexican food for our Chinese boarding students. The looks of complete confusion when they finished making their soft tacos and found our trays of nachos were just beautiful. :tell_me_more:
"No you don't have to put them in the taco! They're just chips with stuff on them!"
Switch: nin.codes/roldford
this is actually a problem with 3 being a whack story, not a fault with mass effect 2
there are many GB compilations but I'm a sucker for Eurovision
https://youtu.be/Vr_qHGNExuo
It's a bummer that those characters aren't more present in ME3, but given the realties of making a game like Mass Effect 3, where you have to account for all of the crazy number of different things that could have happened, it's kind of a miracle that they got the spotlights they did have in ME3.
And the stakes in ME3 are significantly different than the stakes in ME2. I don't think the problem is necessarily that you can't prepare enough to complete perfectly with zero losses; I think it might be that there's not really much of a visible scale as to how well you've done. In ME2 you know that it's building up to a mission where people might die unless you prep extensively, so that's always hanging over you. Everything's a bit more abstract in ME3's ending, as far as what resources are being brought in, so you don't get those panicked moments of "oh shit, Tali might bite it here."
But that's only in the ending of ME3. I think the entire game of ME3 ends up having the same feel as the suicide run, in that you're making tough choices and they're impacted by the work you've done leading up to it, and you know that the results are largely on you. The perfect "suicide run" in ME3 is stuff like, "I came through this with both of these races intact and ready to go." And even though I'm a bigger fan of the ending than most, I do wish the impact of those choices had more of an impact on the close of it beyond "an abstract number went up."
Would be cool to try it someday to findout if I'd like it. Try to be openminded
Lo and behold, I get back to SF and I've seen it at least twice now.
As if gravy itself is gradually flowing down from the north, it's spreading
salt
ketchup
honey
barbecue sauce
a Wendy's chocolate Frosty
No gravy, no cheese, no mustard, none of that
SOMEONE CALL FOR A GRAVY CHEESE MUSTARD FRY DISH
they are, at best, a form of punishment
Especially horseradish mustard. That's the good shit.
I used to think this, then I discovered that the yellow mustard that had been foisted upon me all my life was like, the least of all mustards.
Rock Band DLC | GW:OttW - arrcd | WLD - Thortar
Yeah, yellow mustard is the worst mustard by far. I only eat it when I'm specifically going for "low quality."
Yes, and for many of those condiments, that correct use is throwing them in the trash so they don't wreck my good food