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«12. . .21,88021,88121,88221,88321,88421,88521,886. . .24,38024,381»

Anyone else hype for WoW Classic?

Agadar wrote:Anyone else hype for WoW Classic?

Not really. I liked the changes up until pandaria. Cataclysm was the best expansion

Menna shuli wrote:I just think I didn't do a good job of directing the plot. The format is also really hard to maintain pace for: noir is a lot of talking, and conversations can be hard to RP.

If it’s any consolation, I loved the posts in Rabbithole and was engrossed in the story. You are a fantastic story-teller, I think as Ostehaar was inactive for a bit and I had a host of problems including another RP, it lost traction. I’ll admit that I was a little stuck with how to proceed, but I would have been willing to keep it going to get an ending for it.

Athara magarat

Agadar wrote:Anyone else hype for WoW Classic?

I quit playing after they made it cookie cutter, I liked it much better before cataclysm.

Noronica wrote:If it’s any consolation, I loved the posts in Rabbithole and was engrossed in the story. You are a fantastic story-teller, I think as Ostehaar was inactive for a bit and I had a host of problems including another RP, it lost traction. I’ll admit that I was a little stuck with how to proceed, but I would have been willing to keep it going to get an ending for it.

It's just that I really see no way of reaching a conclusion at the pace we are going. The RP is nearly a year old and we're really nowhere further than when we started.

Noronica and Almorea

Menna shuli wrote:It's just that I really see no way of reaching a conclusion at the pace we are going. The RP is nearly a year old and we're really nowhere further than when we started.

Perhaps bring Sha’s betrayal to the fore sooner? It would be interesting to explore the ‘trust no one’ scenario for Tashe and perhaps see the paranoia grow from the knowledge that one of her own is definitely the killer.

I agree with you in that the RP is at a slow-pace stage and if you lay out what you want to happen now in the OOC then that would help. One of my recent posts is weak because I had no idea if the killer was part of a wider organisation or if was a central figure. This doesn’t have to be airtight, but it would perhaps help to have a basic layout for what you want to happen so that we can still have our individual stories but with the knowledge of where this is all heading.

Menna shuli

Noronica wrote:Perhaps bring Sha’s betrayal to the fore sooner? It would be interesting to explore the ‘trust no one’ scenario for Tashe and perhaps see the paranoia grow from the knowledge that one of her own is definitely the killer.

I agree with you in that the RP is at a slow-pace stage and if you lay out what you want to happen now in the OOC then that would help. One of my recent posts is weak because I had no idea if the killer was part of a wider organisation or if was a central figure. This doesn’t have to be airtight, but it would perhaps help to have a basic layout for what you want to happen so that we can still have our individual stories but with the knowledge of where this is all heading.

I just don't know if I'm going interested in continuing the story if I'm going to be writing a bunch of posts alone. The last post that wasn't mine was in December.

The federation of oofer gang

Xd ( selling things on the market what ever you want ill sell it)

The Mênna Shuli Professional Football Association (Mênna Shushu Visushâka), commonly referred to as the MSV or the Shuvisu, is the primary professional association football organization in Mênna Shuli. It is in charge of the most popular sports leagues in the country, attracting major investment. Founded in the 1980s from the merger of the South-West Cup, the Twin Cities Cup and the Mênnan Football League, the MSV came about in part from the increasing commonality of radios and televisions across Mênna Shuli, significantly increasing the revenue streams available for the various smaller national competitions. The MSV debuted in the 1986/87 season with three divisions consisting of a total of fifty teams, the MSV now oversees three main competitions, two youth competitions and two independent cup tournaments, with a total of 100 teams of varying skill and development. Unlike most national competitions, Mênnan soccer has teams of mixed gender, which makes competition outside of the country except on national team scale difficult to manage, and the Shuvisu has been called "isolationist soccer" as a result.

The hierarchy of competitions in Mênna Shuli goes Mênnan Professional League > Mênnan League One > Mênnan League Two. The Mênna Professional League, which opened in its debut season with 16 teams, currently represents the top eighteen teams of Mênnan association football, while Mênnan L1 represents the next twenty teams and L2 represents the bottom twenty-two teams of professional soccer in the country. Youth League One has the top ten youth teams (-16) in the country, while Youth League Two has the bottom thirty.

The government of Mênna Shuli has a hand in the ownership of the MSV, although not a controlling interest. Association football is perhaps the most obvious example of intercaste cooperating, as no one caste is prescribed sport as a role within the hierarchy. As such, individuals of any caste may play professional football, although it is generally unbecoming for a prince to do so. The top ten wealthiest workers and warriors in the country are all professional footballers.

Mênnan Professional League Logo 2018

Mênnan League 1 Logo 2001

Mênnan League 2 Logo 2004

Mênnan Professional League Teams 2018/19 Season

  • Shuâ Tribal Football Club (Shuâ Tribal, the Shuâ): The defending champions of the 2017/18 season, Shuâ Tribal are an old staple of the Pro League. Like with all tribal teams, they are composed solely of members of the Shuâ tribe, but this limitation (which often kneecaps other tribal teams) has not had a drastic effect on Shuâ Tribal's performance since the Tribal League was absorbed by the MSV in the 1999 acquisition and their teams were entered into the three main league competitions. This is in part because of the size of the tribe not limiting the recruitment pool like many other tribal teams (some of which are now defunct). In addition, Shuâ Tribal was acquired by (INSERT COMPANY HERE) in 2000, providing them the capital for state-of-the-art training facilities and other benefits. Shuâ Tribal play a highly offensive form of the game, relying on their expert strikers to get to the goal and land hits. Their largest rivalries are primarily with other Tribal League clubs that don't frequently get seen in the new League layout, but in recent years there has been bitter rivalries with the Kunêshêktêmilu Electric, in part due to the controversial departure of Shuâ Tribal's head coach to the Electric in 2010. In addition, they frequently battle with Real Shuhakallu for top of the table, leading to a rivalry there as well.

  • Capitol District Football Club (Capitol District, the Centrals, the Pyramids): Capitol District is the newest Twin Cities-based team in the League. They have been facing a downward slide over the past five years, an especially noticeable decline given their top five finishings in their first decade with the League. The blame for this is often remarked by fans to be the seeming lack of interest paid to the team by their owners, with frequent demands for the team to be sold to more attentive upper management. This lack of attention has led to an aging team, which has started to slip towards bottom-of-the-table performance. They are frequent rivals with other Twin Cities teams, most notably with Shuhakallu FC. Their playstyle is generally focused on a felxible frontline who can fall back and support the defense or turn towards a more striking pace if required. This was greatly supported by their star striker, Kilu Kosh Iktu, before a career-ending injury in 2015.

  • Shuhakallu Football Club (SFC, Smugglers): Shuhakallu FC is one of the founding teams of the Pro League, and was formerly a top-tier contender. However, upon the League expansion in 1999, they were suddenly faced with increased competition for players from new Twin Cities teams. This, in combination with the departure of their long-time coach, led to the team slowly degrading over time. They are still fan favourites among certain slums in the capitol, as they are the development location of many hometown heroes from those locations, but their quality of play has placed them firmly in the center of the table for the last decade. Their greatest rivalry is with Real Shuhakallu, with whom they have competed for fifty years, a rivalry which even led to the name of Real Shuhakallu as a petty slight when they were both named Shuhakallu FC. SFC are often frequent rivals with Capitol District as well, due to the proximity of their grounds.

  • Kunêshêktêmilu Electric Football Club (Electric, the Blue-Blacks): Kunêshêktêmilu Electric are a notoriously inconsistent team in the Pro League. While never being relegated in their history, they have come dangerously close in 1996, 2004, 2006, 2010 and 2015. At the same time, they have been a top five team in 1998, 2001, 2007, 2008, 2013 and 2016. Normally, however, they are a middle of the table team. Following the KHF Bombings in 2018, their stadium was heavily damaged by subsequent flooding and several prominent members of the team and association were killed. As such, the Electric were memoralized by the rest of the League, earning them a new nickname: the Survivors. They have several key rivalries, but the most well-known is with Shuâ Tribal, which is far from a friendly competition and has been known as one of the most vitriol-filled rivalries in the national sport. Despite this, Shuâ Tribal were among the first to send their condolences following the Bombing, and the elders of the Shuâ tribe even offered to purchase stadium rights for the Electric to help them rebuild. While this offer was declined, the Electric/Shuâ Tribal rivalry has been much more moderate this season, a softening of emotions clearly prevalent.

  • Êxâti Ibex Football Club (Ibex, the Old Head, the Êxâti): A tribal team that has managed to keep up skilled play despite the greater versatility of non-tribal teams, they usually stay in L1 play. However, they were moved up following high-tier play in the 2016/17 season and have actually been climbing the table since then. Their play focuses on a balance of a quality defense with a switch-hitting midfield, allowing them to shift between a defensive and offensive play fairly swiftly. The trade-off in their play is that they generally lack for the focused training some teams manage to muster, playing mostly responsively to opponents rather than taking an active role in dictating the direction of play. They haven't developed any strong rivalries in Pro League as of yet, although there is some budding fights between them and Shuâ Tribal as the other major tribal team in the League. They also have a budding rivalry with the Volcanoes, given the proximity of the two teams' training locations.

  • Savanna Warriors:

  • Crocodile Bay Football Club

  • Ihwala Musê Hook Football Club

  • Têhaêvu Shipbreakers Football Club

  • Kilâmkallu Desert Raiders

  • Compound Collective Football Club

  • Twin Cities Football Club

  • Real Shuhakallu Football Club

  • Tasuti Tribal FC

  • Kilâmkallu East Football Club

  • Kuhêtulka Fortress Football Club

  • Western Volcanoes Football Club

  • Shêhashêtawaê Football Club

Mênnan Professional League Table 2017/18 Season

Final Ranking

Team

GP

W

L

D

Pts

1

Shuâ Tribal Football Club

34

20

5

9

69

2

Real Shuhakallu Football Club

34

19

5

10

67

3

Twin Cities Football Club

34

19

7

8

65

4

Compound Collective Football Club

34

18

6

10

64

5

Kilâmkallu Desert Raiders

34

13

6

15

54

6

Têhaêvu Shipbreakers Football Club

34

13

8

13

52

7

Ihwala Musê Hook Football Club

34

13

9

12

51*

8

Crocodile Bay Football Club

34

13

9

12

51*

9

Savanna Warriors

34

12

10

12

48

10

Êxâti Ibex Football Club

34

12

13

9

45

11

Kunêshêktêmilu Electric Football Club

34

10

13

11

41

12

Shuhakallu Football Club

34

9

17

8

35

13

Capitol District Football Club

34

7

14

13

34

14

Western Volcanoes Football Club

34

7

16

11

32

15

Shêhashêtawaê Football Club

34

7

18

9

30

16

Hahatan Sharkhunters Football Club

34

6

18

10

28

17

Kuhêtulka Football Club

34

4

16

14

26*

18

Shêwa United Football Club

34

4

16

14

26*

*Standings based on goal differential

The bottom three teams of the Pro League table face relegation to ML1, while the top three teams of ML1 are promoted to Pro League. as such, the Sharkhunters, KFC and Shêwa United were relegated in the 2018/19 season and the Tasuti Tribal Football Club, the Kilâmkallu East Football Club and Kuhêtulka Fortress Football Club were promoted to Pro League.

Read dispatch

Still working on this. Hoping to get some logos done soonish.

Athara magarat, Wellsia, Alteran republics, and Thuzbekistan

How do you''s do?

Alteran republics and Almorea

Alteran republics

High alyria wrote:Rather be best to use a tomahawk for that warhead to weight ratio

I have my BITELs for antiquitated ground attack systems. 🙃

Athara magarat

Alteran republics

The federation of oofer gang wrote:Xd ( selling things on the market what ever you want ill sell it)

A strong and stable government with a plan for Brexit.

Asking for a friend.

I think I've found my calling in making missiles.

Wellsia, Belle ilse en terre, Alteran republics, and Dothrakia

Thuzbekistan wrote:Not really. I liked the changes up until pandaria. Cataclysm was the best expansion

Get out of my sight, you filthy casual.

Agadar wrote:Get out of my sight, you filthy casual.

:(

Alteran republics

https://i.imgur.com/eKv3NtQ.png

Tweaked the graphic. Block 1 would give a surface to air range of around 25/30km. Block 2 would cover up to 80km and Block 3 would cover up to 125km.

I'll start a dispatch later tonight or later in the morning.

Dormill and Stiura, Athara magarat, San Montagna, and Almorea

only one more month until I can not work 65 hours a week

Dormill and Stiura, Athara magarat, Wellsia, San Montagna, and 1 otherThuzbekistan

You know you've got a f*cked up home life when you say "finally" to your step mom getting arrested

Vancouvia wrote:only one more month until I can not work 65 hours a week

Reminds me I need to file my fiance's taxes

Once upon a time
There was a girl
Who was bored one day

Later that night
Her mother made salad
But was confused to find pickles
Where the cucumbers had been

"Passing time with Vuk; method 112."

Submitting fake entries to the New Zealand firearms hand in page.

So far my favorites have been Karl Gerat with his fairly large rifle, Leon Trotsky and his fully automatic icepick, and of course King Arthur and his high capacity excalibur.

Thuzbekistan wrote:Reminds me I need to file my fiance's taxes

i still gotta do my own too

Great-Imperialonia and Thuzbekistan

Polar svalbard

Vancouvia wrote:only one more month until I can not work 65 hours a week

Damn Van. Hopefully its lets stressful than you would expect.

Great-Imperialonia, Athara magarat, and Belle ilse en terre

getting to play civ 6 after a long while is a good feeling. Just sunk about 6-8 hours today into dominating the cultures and economies of the world as the Netherlands

Athara magarat and Wellsia

Domanania wrote:getting to play civ 6 after a long while is a good feeling. Just sunk about 6-8 hours today into dominating the cultures and economies of the world as the Netherlands

Just like IRL.

"If you ain't Dutch, you ain't much."

- William of Orange, probably

Domanania, Great-Imperialonia, Athara magarat, Belle ilse en terre, and 2 othersDothrakia, and Nhoor

«12. . .21,88021,88121,88221,88321,88421,88521,886. . .24,38024,381»

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