
Adam
10.3K posts

Adam
@adam_owa
OWA stands for One Winged Angel. Please no FFVII(1997) spoilers



a photo of a thousand words

IGN's 30 Best Pokemon of all Time List: 30. Bulbasaur 29. Arceus 28. Metagross 27. Dragonite 26. Hawlucha 25. Ditto 24. Piplup 23. Flygon 22. Eevee 21. Lucario 20. Mimikyu 19. Dialga 18. Absol 17. Snorlax 16. Gyarados 15. Tyranitar 14. Greninja 13. Gardevoir 12. Ho-Oh 11. Psyduck 10. Garchomp 9. Suicune 8. Mew 7. Squirtle 6. Celebi 5. Gengar 4. Rayquaza 3. Mewtwo 2. Pikachu 1. Charizard Curated by: @lil_kombucha but other editors participated. ign.com/articles/the-3…







Nice, unlocked the scariest warning screen in FF14


The hunt is on. Step into the world of Horizon Hunters Gathering, a new co-op action game from Guerrilla coming to PS5 and PC: play.st/3ZPOtYi






Here is a simple quick guide on identifying whether a email from a potential sponsor/event/opportunity is legitimate or not! 1) does the email line up with the company? More likely than not the real company would have an official email, not a randomname6286@what.com, 3) is there any identifying information specific to you as a creator or something that is somewhat applicable? This can vary but if the only “customized” part is your name after “Hello” Ask a ton of questions 4)Providing what they’re looking for and asking for rate is a good sign that the deal could be legitimate, always read the fine print. 5)Do the links make sense? If they send you a tracking link guised as a normal link you can ask for an untraceable one, if they don’t then you have your answer (if they don’t have any you can ask for them but it’s a red flag to not want to provide proof of legitimacy) 6) Do contacts you know work with said company? If no one you know has ever heard of company/sponsor it could be a bad sign, ALWAYS try to vet 7) if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is

@geoffkeighley The █████ are silent. █████ bleeds. New █████ stir.





