ウイスキー
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ウイスキー
@usuki168
エアガンシューティングしてるオタクアカウントですよ。 たまーにクルマも横向けます。
昔関西、今東海 Katılım Eylül 2024
346 Takip Edilen188 Takipçiler
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【速報】「峠の釜めし」で知られる「おぎのや」で食中毒 弁当「峠の親子めし」が原因か 22人が発症し2人入院 横川工場で3日間営業停止 #ldnews news.livedoor.com/article/detail… えぇえええ!!加熱する釜飯で?!
日本語
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【EZY 情報】
▼▲著名人からのコメントーー
#庵野秀明
監督・プロデューサー
ーーーーーーーーーーーー▼▲
『機動警察パトレイバー EZY』
全3章構成にて劇場公開
File 1:絶賛公開中!
File 2:2026年8月14日(金)
File 3:2027年3月
#パトレイバーEZY #patlabor

日本語
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A topic that refuses to die is “competition will get you kilt in the streets!” Developing and testing skills via competition is an excellent way to pressure test your abilities. It is neither training in nor application of tactics, not even if your sport thinks it is. Tactical training, whether it is CQB, vehicle stops, tubular target assaults, etc. is primarily focused on problem solving skills. It is not designed to focus on your raw mechanical skills, which are most efficiently built via a separate training block (CQB runs in the house vs flat range movement and shooting drills). I shot USPSA long before I ever started my old job, and continued to compete during my career as time allowed. At no point did a behavior only suitable in a match ever bleed into my work, but instead the experience gave me an edge at work in having a very high level of mechanical skill. Further, I guarantee that no armed professional has ever stood on the line at range day and thought "I hope I don't build too much mechanical skill."

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