SpamSpam Post - nonsense approved ^^

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Degiance

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Jul 5, 2017
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It's kinda amusing the moment he says:"This is the end of Trump administration." he tries his very best to disguise that head shake as a nod. (Not to mention the micro-expression deception leakage trough the entire thing) He knows fully well it's not the end and his trying to lie to people on camera. Why i do not know, but what i do know his gotta visit the deception expert that taught him that bullshit move and fire his ass cause those tricks don't work anymore.
 

ble003

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Aug 7, 2016
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In 2011, an alternate reality game known as the "Cow ClickARG" was held, where a series of clues from the "bovine gods" eventually revealed that a "Cowpocalypse" would occur on July 21, 2011 (exactly one year since the original release of the game). From then on, every click made by players would deduct thirty seconds from a countdown clock leading to the Cowpocalypse. However, players could extend the countdown clock by paying to supplicate with Facebook Credits: paying 10 credits would extend the countdown by a single hour, while 4,000 would extend the countdown by an entire month.[5] After $700 worth of extensions, the countdown clock expired on the evening of September 7, 2011. At this point, the game remained playable, but all the cows were replaced by blank spaces and said to have been raptured. Bogost intended the Cowpocalypse event to signal the "end" of the game to players; when addressing a complaint by a fan who felt the game was no longer fun after the cow rapture, Bogost responded that "it wasn't very fun before."[3][4][6]
 

Pandagnome

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Jul 27, 2016
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In 2011, an alternate reality game known as the "Cow ClickARG" was held, where a series of clues from the "bovine gods" eventually revealed that a "Cowpocalypse" would occur on July 21, 2011 (exactly one year since the original release of the game). From then on, every click made by players would deduct thirty seconds from a countdown clock leading to the Cowpocalypse. However, players could extend the countdown clock by paying to supplicate with Facebook Credits: paying 10 credits would extend the countdown by a single hour, while 4,000 would extend the countdown by an entire month.[5] After $700 worth of extensions, the countdown clock expired on the evening of September 7, 2011. At this point, the game remained playable, but all the cows were replaced by blank spaces and said to have been raptured. Bogost intended the Cowpocalypse event to signal the "end" of the game to players; when addressing a complaint by a fan who felt the game was no longer fun after the cow rapture, Bogost responded that "it wasn't very fun before."[3][4][6]
They could of made a restaurant simulator and if you lose balance playing as a waiter and drop food you lose profits
and choosing live food instead of thoroughly cooked could attack the guest e.g a live lobster etc
 
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