cardcaptorrlh85
CardcaptorRLH85
cardcaptorrlh85

That doesn’t mean the rest of the world uses those services.

My understanding is the locals pay less then a foreign company

There are games out there that let you play as a politician. 

The hard requirements for a Paladin are no longer “Lawful Good”.  You can be a Paladin of an evil God which wouldn’t make sense to be Lawful Good.

>But there is no logical reason for her to be a Paladin, even with 5E’s loosy goosy half assed requirements.

She’s a Vengeance Paladin.

Nice to see that knocking someone out actually has a meaningfully different outcome than killing them now.

Probably some kid of “admit fault” or precedent setting thing. Given the federal vehicle code does not require immobilizers, Kia/Hyundai probably doesn’t want to set the precedent/idea of it being a given. The software update can probably address most of the cases given after you lock the car with the fob, the car

While this is a stupid decision on his part, definitely fuck Kia. Their prolonged inaction on this is causing real harm. I get that we can get into victim blaming pretty easily here and it’s ultimately the criminals’ faults for the theft, Kia outright failed to provide even a low level of protection. It’s like if

As you say, it makes logical sense and none of the dialogue would have to change. I’m glad they did this. Only being able to recruit her by being evil when it still makes sense the other way, in its own way feels like a game that implements invisible walls instead of creative level design. It’s the right move in my

Neat! I knew it wouldn’t work and I haven’t gotten to moonrise yet, but I DID knock her out with nonlethal attacks during that fight. So I’m curious to see if this applies to playthroughs where the knockout happened pre-patch, but moonrise happens post-patch.

How many hands do you have? Haha

Adding an immobilizer is not complex or expensive. Why Kia/Hyundai stick their head in the sand and refuse to fix the problem their vehicles are associated with is perplexing. Free immobilizer retrofit and certificate $500 or $1000 only good for use on new vehicle is the solution I’d recommend.

On one hand, this seems like cutting off your nose to spite your face. If he financed the car, his dropping it off at a dealership doesn’t absolve him of his responsibility to make the payments. If he paid cash for it, he’s leaving several grand just sitting there.

In Philly, the cops literally blew up a neighborhood in 1985.

At least here they were acting out of stupidity.

Could they not just.... drench them in water and throw them away? Cut them open and empty out the gunpowder? How is setting them off the only possible solution, besides just simply wanting to see them go off?

gnarly

The expert, identified as “Bomb Technician C,” expressed concern about the amount of explosives “on several occasions” before the detonation, according to the report conducted by the Office of the Inspector General of the Los Angeles Police Department.

And in the ultimate display of cruelty, a SWAT team member drove a dog trying to flee the home back into the inferno, where it met an agonizing death.

I’m sure it’s covered in the doc, but I remember that they tried (probably successfully) to pass all the blame onto the person who owned the fireworks.