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So many reaction gifs

Now that's what I call

There must be some way to write that sentence without suggesting it's a film starring a release date belonging to Jeff Bridges.

E for Effort

Maybe he just wants to be more like Rajon Rondo

We all know you Googled that shit

A couple of thoughts:

Possible explanations, in order of plausibility:

Real tracks are much bumpier than they are depicted in almost any racing game. Make the virtual tracks bumpier.

Bonkers is a great description

GT2?

I get your point but an arrhythmia is nothing like a heart attack. People with afib live with a chronic arrhythmia with few or no symptoms. However, a severe arrhythmia can lead to a heart attack. And I'd say "not a stroke" implies "not a TIA" but admittedly the term stroke is pretty vague.

In defense of developers, modern games are exponentially more labor-intensive to create than most games a generation ago. Considering that presentation is essential to the success of a big-market game, graphical, aural, and physical effects are more important than ever, and it is extremely time consuming to generate

He set the fastest time in the practice session where he set the record for being youngest to participate in F1. I'd like to see a 12 year old do that.

I am not a fan of Sebastian Vettel. I think he has benefited tremendously from a superlative car. I wish he faced stronger competition. I think the stunt he pulled in Malaysia was extremely poor form. I also think his skill is overlooked on account of the strength of his car. I took a quick trip to Wikipedia to

I'm not sure what this is referring to? Vettel seems perfectly capable of moving through traffic and driving a car with problems. Do you have an example in mind?

For some reason the way he scrambled "magnanimous" kind of ruined it for me

That can't be the right word

I think your link to the recent study about NFL players returning to the field is incorrect. The title looks like this:

Sure. That's neither here nor there. The system is unfair because it is built on unfair processes. If the rankings were all conducted fairly (i.e. by computers), no one could claim bias for or against this or that conference, nor could they criticize the polls for applying different standards to different teams.