squegeeboo
squegeeboo
squegeeboo

Even flying southwest, where your first two bags are free, this is still terrible advice.

I have to check now when traveling with the baby, and it adds time at the start and end of the trip. And has screwed us on not being able to transfer to earlier flights.

Adding onto that, last time I checked, my bag came out

It’s got a steep learning curve, but once you figure it out, it’s pretty easy to manage your hand size.  Even playing super aggressive with lost cards, I rarely ran out before the end of the scenario and even if I did, as long as the win condition doesn’t require everyone to make it, it’s still a win if at least 1

20 turns is a really long scenario, most end in the low-mid teens, also your math is wrong, assuming you never lose a card to damage or play a lost card, and only take short rests, a 10 card starting hand is 25 turns.

Matt’s story is 100% his fault, and isn’t even that epic of a quit.

Mind the Tram Car Please

A lot of gamers feel that Resistance: Avalon is basically version 2.0 of the Resistance that fixes some balance/play issues.

It’s a good game, but it’s been surpassed.
“The Resistance Avalon” is basically a better, 2.0 version of the game, with a king arthur skinning on it.
And
“Secret Hitler” is similar, but with a small amount of randomness for those who have issues with the perfect information within most social deduction games.

Of course, brown bears and polar bears can have offspring, so it invalidates the entire reason you can’t count multiple dog breeds.

You trusted your buyers agent? Generally speaking they split about a 6% commission 50/50 with the sellers agent. They want you to buy the first house you see, for as much money as possible, so they get the largest commission possible for the least amount of time. The only reason they even pretend to play hardball is

“Unlike homeowners, renters don’t have to pay for property taxes, HOA fees, or maintenance.”

The link in the article explains it. The author was confusing ‘all taxes within a state’ with ‘income taxes’. It looks to be the ‘average tax load’ by state, so it’s including sales/income/property/gas and a few others based on what the ‘average’ person would spend on those things within a year.

Off the top of my head, NY has a higher income tax rate than 5%. Additionally, for 2015, Illinois had a 3.75% tax rate, in fact for the ‘average’ taxpayer, Illinois ranks around 35th for highest income tax rate.