NatR
NatR
NatR

I just hope Wisconsin was savvy enough to stick most of that tax incentive money into escrow the way Nevada apparently did, so they’re not left holding the bag if that happens.

The hyperloop is (theoretically) supposed to have a smaller, less disruptive footprint, and doesn’t bring the noise and other factors with it.

Congratulations, you are the 1%. Every industry has a group of people within it who fit like a glove, no matter how misshapen the hand is.

That’s good to know!

That’s good to know!

You’re not the only one. I have zero issues with other sites that use non-YouTube embedded videos, but whatever they’re using now is terrible.

They do in fact offer polyhedral dice sets, which is good because otherwise they’d be ignoring a target market demographic for this product.

They do in fact offer polyhedral dice sets, which is good because otherwise they’d be ignoring a target market

Honestly if they had just not rented a fog machine it would have been a bit much, but ok.

Honestly if they had just not rented a fog machine it would have been a bit much, but ok.

While I get it, I desperately hope that $50k includes subsidizing all the R&D to make the Raptor’s fancy digital driving mode system works just as good with the new parts. In which case I kind of get it.

I had to finally upgrade my first smartphone because the charging port broke off from where it was soldered to the board.

I didn’t remember that was a thing.

Thanks.

Feel free to complain to the person who created it.

Care only goes so far, genetics really has to get you the rest of the way.

Given that the current structured activity that is labeled as drifting became very popular in Japan and was signal boosted primarily from there to the popularity it now has worldwide, that’s not really a far fetched stereotype.

They were really quite different stories. Initial D seemed to have way more of that Shonen martial arts fighting but with automotive trappings feel to it vs Wangan Midnight that was a much different sort of arc of adversity.

I don’t think any english language versions are in print currently, so everything to buy is going to be used, and from reading a couple sources, TokyoPop apparently never published the full run because their license ran out before it was finished.

I found it interesting if only because the story structure is an adaptation of well trod shonen tropes adapted to something different than the usual martial arts/supernatural powers genre.

If he spends $15,000 on an attorney to fight for it, he might get back some of it.

It’s nice that they’re now not even making a pretense of targeting the lower socioeconomic bracket who’s least able to fight back against such blatant exploitation since that’s the demographic that tends to use that sort of financial instrument.

Remember, in civil forfeiture, it’s not the person that’s guilty, it’s the goods.