moxfactor
this place is no longer fun. bye.
moxfactor

isn’t that the same odds as people who think they know how to run a small business, then fail? i hear just as much “customers are nowhere to be found” or “supplier fails to deliver”.

so you’re saying other people flicking their sweat onto you is no different than you sweating? i will scratch my armpits even when they’re sweaty, but i will absolutely refuse to even get close to yours. now maybe that’s not the norm for you, but it is for me. same goes for the soles of my shoes filled with tens of

in the presence of air and dust and whatever else airborne is not the same as touching the ground that everyone else has stepped on. your food/hands/shirt that’s in the presence of air, is not the same as your food/hands/shirt that is touching the ground. yes, there’s a chance dirt will get onto your food/hands/shirt

do you use your t-shirt to step on every step of the pavement while you’re outside? if you do, i have no idea how to talk to you.

IKR?

the problem here is in Brian’s wording. eating on subways is a no-no. eating on trains is to be expected. trains and subways are 2 different things. the point of ekiben (eki = station, ben = short for bento = rice box) is to be eaten on trains. there’s even a manga devoted to going around the country looking at all

it’s called a Phiomia. =P

Emoji are the pics. Kaomoji(顔文字: face words) or Emoticon are the ascii/unicode based character combinations. Emoji literally means drawn words, as in pictures and not text.

do it please. i will subscribe just to see well done 40k cosplay.

that pocket holding magazines and such, is built with that functionality, so i’ll keep putting in and removing things with sharp angles from that pocket, and quickly snapping the elastic band each time. because putting things in a pocket is a function of the pocket, and other people’s comfort should be disregarded

with the new Hokuriku shinkansen, people thinking of visiting both Tokyo and Kyoto really should detour over to Kanazawa for a few days before taking the Thunderbird down to Kyoto. it’s such an underrated city. if you think Tsukiji’s outer market is great, Omicho market is just as good if not better, and Kenrokuen can

but that brings up another question. is the standard skewed from the start. do women value male sexiness in characters of video games they play. and the follow up, must male value of sexiness be set by women and if so, should female value of sexiness then be set by men? i can understand the right for men and women to

we have different takes on this. i see Emily Blunt on Edge of Tomorrow and she’s a bad ass “soldier” with a lot of movie makeup on, looks gorgeous in every shot. that’s what this video game is, just animated representations of actors in fighting roles. not actual soldiers, not even in the role of soldiers. this isn’t

soldiers? or pretend 3D animated soldiers in a video game that are essentially models? and we’re talking about child-like faces on adults, a mostly genetic quality. or is your comment about people with a certain look having no right being in the military?

play the Marvel one instead (Future Fight). it’s PTW rating is very low, although it’s quite grindy, you do get a certain number of “clear tickets” every so often so you can just click a button to get the money and item rewards for a level that you’ve already completed so it makes it a little less grindy.

Grecian weapon, is that you?

i wouldn’t mind a baby blue Tuxedo Sam version~

is that English?

same. i visit both Japan and China at least twice a year. i like the people and places of both countries very much. doesn’t mean i’m oblivious to the stupidity of the government or the countries’ history. as much as i hate Tojo being enshrined at Yasukuni, i still tell people to visit the shrine to see sakura because

while i’m not a fan of the CPC, you may want to upgrade your history of the CPC. they were formed during Sun Yat Sen’s reign as the Premier of the KMT as a socialist movement while the Beiyang government wrecked havoc throughout China.