Greb wrote:
Make me some crackers
![Trollface ¦]](./images/smilies/troll.gif)
jorb wrote:
Trial by Fire: Can now be used by anyone, not just members of the village that built it.
tweenprinc3ss wrote:Ok. These new patches are getting so strange. The mechanics of raising purity of you tools and destroying the old ones MAKES NO SENSE. Why would, a pioneer, out in the middle of the scary wilderness, trying against all odds to survive, bother making a new compost bin once a week. This is the exact opposite of reality. These guys would use tools FOR GENERATIONS. There are farmers still using tools thier great great grandfather made by hand. Now Loftar saying pressure cookers are the same. These mehanics much more are representative of the walmart society of planned obsolesence we live in now. I makes no sense to me that someone would destroy their tools tha work fine for one that works a tiny bit better...
Yuka wrote:Ursus wrote:Colliquative Pressure Cooker was tested for 8 hours. No changes in the properties of objects were observed. Any idea why this is happening?
Try to put smth in it at first, lol.
I mean, what did you put there?
tweenprinc3ss wrote:Ok. These new patches are getting so strange. The mechanics of raising purity of you tools and destroying the old ones MAKES NO SENSE. Why would, a pioneer, out in the middle of the scary wilderness, trying against all odds to survive, bother making a new compost bin once a week. This is the exact opposite of reality. These guys would use tools FOR GENERATIONS. There are farmers still using tools thier great great grandfather made by hand. Now Loftar saying pressure cookers are the same. These mehanics much more are representative of the walmart society of planned obsolesence we live in now. I makes no sense to me that someone would destroy their tools tha work fine for one that works a tiny bit better...
darnokpl wrote:But does waste-claims can overlap each other?
Greb wrote:
MaoZeDong wrote:
There's no way that's intended. The lead and mercury contents are literally at the smallest allowed integer in Java.
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