Crust

433 posts

Crust

Crust

@The_Crusty_One

Don't expect me to post shit. I'm too lazy for social meed

Up Katılım Mayıs 2009
29 Takip Edilen3 Takipçiler
The Washington Post
The Washington Post@washingtonpost·
The Post called the White House. But the name attached to the number read “Epstein Island.” A Google Maps error labeled the White House as “Epstein Island” on some Android phones. Google reversed the edit and the White House said it was an external issue. wapo.st/3NR5I9s
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@pcgamer Off. The crap people say in chat ends up devolving into either shit talking , someone's TV in the background with kids screaming, or illiterate mumbling.
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PC Gamer
PC Gamer@pcgamer·
I don’t always get downed, but when I do, I immediately start bargaining for my life in proximity chat. Somehow, it’s had a 10% success rate 🙏 #pcgamer #pcgaming #marathon
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Mikki
Mikki@Mikki58617040·
@CultureCrave RE9 has the worst story. It deserves to be around RE3 remake.
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Culture Crave 🍿
Culture Crave 🍿@CultureCrave·
Metacritic scores for all the major 'Resident Evil' games 🧟‍♂️
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@not_mynes @NintendoAmerica Nothing says Nintendo like actual humans getting killed in war and making a joke out of it. I'm sure our allies are starting to regret their relationship with us.
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Eli Harman
Eli Harman@MartianHoplite·
@KyleMiller4375 @archeohistories No, but women will trans their own kids. Women will divorce you, take the dog, & have it put down. Women will gossip & start drama. Women will cheat, have someone else's baby, tell you it's yours, & try to get you to raise/support it for years. Women will make false accusations.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
For more than two thousand years, a single woman has carried the blame for everything that went wrong in the world... In Greek mythology, that woman is Pandora. The familiar version of the story is simple: Pandora opens a jar—later mistranslated as a box—and releases suffering into the world. Disease, grief, hardship, and misery escape, and humanity is forced to live with the consequences. Her mistake becomes one of the most famous cautionary tales in Western storytelling. But the deeper details of the myth tell a very different story. Pandora did not create the evils inside the jar. The gods did. The story begins with a rebellion. The Titan Prometheus steals fire from the gods and gives it to humanity. Fire means warmth, technology, knowledge, and power. Zeus, king of the gods, sees this as a dangerous shift in the balance between gods and mortals. Human beings are becoming too capable. So Zeus decides to retaliate—not by taking fire back, but by designing a punishment that will follow humanity forever. He orders the creation of the first woman. The gods craft Pandora deliberately, each contributing something to make her irresistible and complex. Aphrodite gives beauty. Athena gives skill. Hermes gives cleverness and persuasion. She is named Pandora—“all-gifted”—because she carries the combined offerings of the gods themselves. But alongside those gifts comes the trap. Pandora is sent to earth with a sealed jar. Inside it are all the hardships that will define human life: sickness, labor, jealousy, sorrow, aging, and pain. The gods themselves placed them there. Pandora’s only role in the story is the moment she eventually lifts the lid. When the jar opens, suffering floods into the world. In horror, Pandora quickly closes it again—but by then almost everything has escaped. Only one thing remains inside. Hope. And from that moment forward, Pandora becomes history’s scapegoat. Prometheus, the male figure who defied Zeus and stole fire, is remembered as a daring hero. His punishment—eternal torment—is portrayed as noble rebellion. Pandora, meanwhile, becomes the warning: the woman whose curiosity doomed humanity. Yet the structure of the story raises a troubling question. If the gods created the punishment… if they filled the jar… if they sent it to earth… why is Pandora the one remembered as responsible? Ancient Greek poet Hesiod, writing in the 8th century BCE, described Pandora as a “beautiful evil” sent to plague men. In his telling, the very existence of women is framed as a divine punishment for humanity. Seen through that lens, Pandora’s story becomes less about curiosity and more about cultural anxiety—about knowledge, independence, and the fear of what might happen when control slips away. And still, one detail remains quietly powerful. Hope stayed behind. For thousands of years scholars have debated what that means. Was hope preserved for humanity? Or was it trapped inside the jar, another thing withheld from the world? Either interpretation leaves us with the same haunting truth: even in a story meant to explain suffering, hope sits at the center of the human experience.. What do you think—was Pandora truly responsible, or was she simply the easiest person to blame? © She's So Cool #archaeohistories
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Kyle Miller
Kyle Miller@KyleMiller4375·
@archeohistories Did women start the slave trade? Did women created the nazi party? Did women start the KKK? Better question; are women in position of power to even START a war? Did women blow up the twin towers? Did women start both world wars? There you go ladies....
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@westerosies We sure that ain't for the Gollum movie?
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westerosies
westerosies@westerosies·
Prince Aegon “Egg” Targaryen’s concept art vs. on-screen realization in ‘A KNIGHT OF THE SEVEN KINGDOMS’ 🐉
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Vinesauce Clips Bot
Vinesauce Clips Bot@VinesauceClips·
Oppa Plug and Play Style • Game: Games + Demos • Clipped by: Fireshock20
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Varukshen
Varukshen@Varukshen·
@IGN Why does he just stay still when Dr. Victor runs his hands through his hair? 🤣
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IGN
IGN@IGN·
"Well, that's my cardio for the week." Leon S. Kennedy is back in Resident Evil Requiem with the sharpest one-liners yet! Here are some of his most memorable lines in the game:
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Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@mohbii @IGN Except he isn't the support character considering you play half the game as him and finish it with him.
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mohbi
mohbi@mohbii·
@IGN Leon works as a support because he is not carrying the horror weight. Grace being the lead was the right call. Capcom using Leon as the guy who walks in and cracks a joke is the smartest thing they could have done with him.
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@IGN *EARLY Spoilers* "Sorry, I don't do anal" when he shoots and kills The Chunk from behind was my favorite.
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@dudusx12_ @PolyDepression @GameHistoryOrg It's not an amazing game but it's weird as hell and there's some crazy shit in it. It's a couple banger songs in it . I wouldn't go out of your way to play it, but it's enjoyable to watch streamers play it in my opinion
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dudus
dudus@dudusx12_·
@PolyDepression @GameHistoryOrg with all due respect - game preservation is important and all, but is Cookie Bustle actually good, or do people like how mysterious it is with the takedowns or whatever
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Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@KrazIIvan_ @pcgamer It's okay, The post can't hurt you anymore. Deep breaths there.
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PC Gamer
PC Gamer@pcgamer·
'I did create a whole mood board': Playing Leon Kennedy in Resident Evil Requiem was 'uncharted territory' for Nick Apostolides because the stakes were so high pcgamer.com/games/resident…
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Crust
Crust@The_Crusty_One·
@SynthPotato I'm kinda sad Chris quit his boulder diet. Guy was rock hard with those biceps
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Synth Potato🥔
Synth Potato🥔@SynthPotato·
All franchises should take notes from Resident Evil on how to handle its legacy characters THIS is how you treat legends of gaming👏
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr Kiriyenko before and after release from Russian captivity.... The before-and-after photographs of Ukrainian soldier Oleksandr Kiriyenko highlight the harsh realities of captivity during war. In the first photo, he appears strong and healthy, but after his release from Russian detention, his body shows the unmistakable toll of prolonged neglect. His transformation reflects the testimonies of other Ukrainian POWs who describe meager rations, poor medical care, and abusive conditions. Sadly, this is not without precedent. Throughout history, prisoners of war have often endured terrible hardships. During World War II, Allied soldiers captured in the Pacific reported starvation and disease in camps, while German POWs in Soviet captivity suffered similarly from inadequate food and shelter. In Vietnam, American prisoners held at the “Hanoi Hilton” recounted long years of deprivation and psychological strain. Kiriyenko’s case fits into this broader historical pattern, serving as both a sobering reminder of the recurring brutality of war and a call for stronger adherence to international laws designed to protect captured soldiers. © Reddit #archaeohistories
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Fascinating
Fascinating@fasc1nate·
When Mick Jagger and his girlfriend Marianne Faithfull met Alain Delon in 1967. Look at more amazing historical photos: bit.ly/44OpIzi
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