Yep, I know I’m a little late on the reply but you nailed it. I have a crippling addiction to those good, good boys.
Yep, I know I’m a little late on the reply but you nailed it. I have a crippling addiction to those good, good boys.
As a warehouse worker in the US, I say it doesn’t matter since Labor Day has gradually become “Work normal hours but earn 1.5x pay for it day”.
It’s such a shame, I had a 2011 Kia Soul that was my favorite car I’ve ever owned (and notably not in the model years with the immobilizer problem). Unfortunately some moron crashed into me earlier this year and totaled it. My first thought was to replace it with another Soul but their reputation is so bad at this point that I had to go with something else. Six months later a Soul that I test drove is still sitting at the same used car dealership. No one will touch them.
If you think this is desperate you should try searching for Google through Bing.
Black cats are such bros. I have two and they basically act like they’re dogs. There is no such thing as too much attention. They beg for food at the table. They bring toys up to you in their mouths wanting to play. They sit outside my bathroom “guarding” anyone that uses it - then meow their faces off expecting treats for their services. They even kept pouncing on my diabetic Mom while she was asleep and unknowingly having a blood sugar crash until she woke up and got something to eat. I never thought I’d waste money on canned cat food but I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say they saved her life, they are worth it.
Worth pointing out this is a photoshop, Weigraf never actually says this. Excellent game nonetheless.
You have no idea what you’re talking about. Nintendo has oodles of cash sitting around from the Wii days to do whatever they want. And you already stated the reason there isn’t a Switch more powerful than the Series X: not because Nintendo doesn’t have access to it, but because Nintendo doesn’t care about that. More power = more time spent optimizing graphics = less time to focus on making the game fun. That’s Nintendo’s business model, and it works.