MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا
MofuGaming ✝️
692 posts

MofuGaming ✝️
@iPostGameClips
Games, Anime, Faith, and Fluff! Philippians 2:8
شامل ہوئے Ocak 2026
349 فالونگ29 فالوورز
MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا


Jet is suffering through the applications right now.
These are all so bad, I no longer worry about mine. It's just normal by comparison lmao.
#fishtanklive #fishtankdotlive

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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

The text "DAY 377" appears on the screen of Director Mode.
The chat instantly explodes, schizoposting.
Only for a few moments later:
#fishtanklive #fishtankdotlive

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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

Would actually be a funny bit to have one of the fish pep talk him now #fishtanklive
𝕭𝖔𝖔𝖌𝖘@largesizedcup
Jet is going to need a pep talk after today #fishtanklive
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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

BIG NEWS 📰 Fishtank made the news
(For Ben beating Landon's ass 😂)
#fishtanklive @fishtankislive
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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

@Nimbopill So much coal production, enough to kickstart a second industrial revolution.
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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

@Regike_ I just played it, I wasn't sure if I would enjoy it but stuck with it and eventually found myself staring at a counter wondering what the better option was, betray everyone I love or make a deal with the devil.
Amazing game, but I did not beat it. It beat me.

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@SandyofCthulhu I was just thinking of playing some Total War this morning and now I'm even more inclined after this history dump.
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MofuGaming ✝️ ری ٹویٹ کیا

One of the less-appreciated reasons for American success in WW2 is that our army and army-group commanders were really good.
Hitler, Tojo, and Churchill focused on loyalty and thus often kept men in charge (or removed men) who really didn't deserve it. Stalin didn't care about loyalty, but he DID worry about disloyalty, so while his army commanders were generally good, he blocked (or murdered) qualified men. Naturally these regimes managed to get some talented generals and admirals at times anyway.
But the USA followed different methods. If a commander failed, he was almost always removed and assigned to a new job in which he was likely to succeed. For example, General Fredendall (probably the worst commander we had) and General Lucas were both yanked after battlefield disasters and sent home to manage training armies, for which they appear to have been competent. We'd relieve division commanders, corps commanders, and even army commanders. In one case - Eichelberger - he managed to redeem himself and keep his command. That was unusual for the American system. We always figured the guy on top was the easiest one to replace.
It's scandalous that our high commanders aren't better-known. Sure Patton and MacArthur were flamboyant, outspoken, and excellent, but Hodges, Devers, Patch, and Buckner were terrific leaders. Our worst army group commander was Mark Clark, and he wasn't even that bad - his main problem was that Italy was a bad fit for him.
MacArthur gets a lot of hostility, and he was personally an egomaniac jerk but he was in fact a good commander, and took care of the lives of his men. The New Guinea campaign, with almost impossible terrain, and a dug-in enemy, cost us about 35,000 American & Australian casualties. But it inflicted over 200,000 Japanese deaths and destroyed the Japanese 18th army. It's one of the great one-sided campaign victories of all time and it's rarely talked about.
General Patch, whom few have heard of, led the final offensive on Guadalcanal and drove off the Japanese. Eventually he went to Europe and defeated the Germans in the Vosges and stopped the Nordwind offensive, while his reserves were sent off to fight in the Battle of the Bulge. He led the only contested offensive in the Vosges that has ever succeeded, and he did it without air support. My father-in-law fought in that campaign.
I'd put Hodges or Devers up against Rommel, Rundstedt, or maybe even Manstein any day. We had such good leaders. One of the reasons they were so fantastic was that they were all required to attend the Army Industrial College, so they all had a keen understanding of logistics. They knew how hard it was to ship a Sherman tank overseas, and that for every gallon of gas that reached the front line, 2-3 gallons were spent getting it there. The only high ranking American general who DIDN'T go to the Industrial College was Patton (due to age), and in fact he was the guy who famously outran his supplies several times!

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