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  • theroot
    d3v
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    Actually, Yakuza tend to prefer flashier cars such as Benzes. 

    This. As a watch enthusiast, I'd much rather have that GS "Snowflake" in the photo than a bog standard Datejust. 

    I guess nobody told old Smokey Nagata that when he shoved one into his Supra and got a thousand horses with it.

    Because too many people have been on that David Tracy juice and are now refusing to pay full price unless it’s got holes on the floor boards due to rust.

    Arcade sticks are actually supposed to be built to last. However, these do require maintenance (gunk that builds up in the parts due to sweat and pizza can lead to damage down the line), and as the market for arcades shrank, most owners just refused to do maintenance until it was really necessary.

    I believe that was the main reasoning they used to get it banned.

    A weapon to surpassbe surpassed by Metal Gear.

    Not in Asia where minivans (and vans in general) are seen as status symbols, and most plutocrats get shuttled around in Alphards.

    Making them isn’t the problem (considering there’s a big market for them in Asia). It’s bringing them across the Pacific.

    Just like Naughty Dog became an Uncharted factory until... oh wait, there’s The Last of Us... bad example. I mean Guerilla then and Killzone... oh yeah, Horizon exists. Sucker Punch then and Infamous...ohshit, they're making Ghosts of Tsushima. Goddamit Sony, acquisition is supposed to kill studios, not make them

    Yep, just like Naughty Dog, Guerilla, Sucker Punch, Santa Monica Studio, etc... oh wait, all those studios have bern thriving under Sony. 

    Who made DmC.

    They won’t hear it though. The bullets are supersonic so they’d be dead before the sound wave gets close.

    I would ask if can baby, but since it’s Russian, I believe the better question is “does it babushka?”

    I would ask if can baby, but since it’s Russian, I believe the better question is “does it babushka?”

    Pretty sure they can’t bring this over to the ‘States though. Isn’t it illegal to have taillights mounted on a moving part of the vehicle.

    Because the only way to achieve perfect balance would be to give everyone the same exact same moveset.

    Because, outside of the US, the LC still absolutely sells. For example, last year in Australia, Toyota sold 6500 LC 200s in the span of 6 months, compared to only 1,500 Discoveries from Land Rover, and paltry 700 Patrols by Nissan.

    Most likely, Rising Thunder was his baby after all.

    Because Ferrari made money from those. The real issue here is that he’s advertising his products with Ferraris, but without paying them money.