Step 1: Make engine more faster.
Step 2: Throw out the entire rest of the car and start over.
Step 3: ????
Step 4: Profit
Step 1: Make engine more faster.
Step 2: Throw out the entire rest of the car and start over.
Step 3: ????
Step 4: Profit
*ruff neighborhood
But the ~$15,000 sports- economy-car segment is kind of a thing in Russia—just not in North America.
Cheap pricing, easy financing, and a toughness deficiency after their six months working as a security guard at PetSmart.
Who lit the fire under his ass?
TNN: We Know Drama™
You’ve been on a roll with comments lately. Keep up the good work!
If only that wasn’t a screenshot from a Gran Turismo game...
I see what you did there.
Jeep Compass, hands down.
This is the perfect absolutely-no-fucks-left-to-give vehicle and I want it.
If you’d told me ten, hell, even five years ago that Hyundai was going to become a serious contender in the sports compact market I would’ve laughed until I collapsed.
Check your filename - I’m pretty sure you just uploaded a picture from the last neighborhood BBQ my dad held
Just got through the first level and, wow. It’s a little rough around the edges and the expanded areas aren’t as lively and intuitive as the original sets, but this plays well and has a pace close to the original game. Definitely worth the download even in its current form. Can’t wait to see how this one evolves.
Russian Man Finds Missing Link to Steel-Belted Radial Tires
The whole country is full of rich idiots. These should be gone by now.
Yeah...I pretty much always opt for the paid rental since there’s always the chance that something will go wrong with my friend’s truck while it’s in my possession. Saving $10 net of beer considerations isn’t worth the risk of straining a good relationship.
All that ambivalence between a Boxster and a Miata says the Miata is probably the way to go. I sincerely doubt power will be an issue with the revised motor and a chassis that weighs less than your typical Philly Cheesesteak.
THAT’S WHAT THAT STICKER WAS?!
I mean that’s absolutely possible, but with the car’s only connection to the outside world piped through a phone, the risk is heavily mitigated since software updates and/or new phone hardware will patch out such vulnerabilities much more often than any system in the car will.