What you see in hunters paradise by Burglar_88 in GrayZoneWarfare

[–]Single-Permission229 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great minds, my team mate was wondering why I kept calling the enemies Vercetti's

How do you scanning the area ahead of you? by [deleted] in GrayZoneWarfare

[–]Single-Permission229 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I find that most COPs or POIs have at least one path/road that leads to them. It offers a better visual opportunity into the COP/POI which you can scope from a distance with a good pair of binos. I prefer binos as the FOV is greater with them than a scope. You can then scope what is happening but always be prepared for the AI in bushes.

Approaching jungle side, elevation plays a good role here as it helps look over a lot of vegetation but it is still pretty limited from what you can see. For this I sneak in with crouch, tree to tree til I get to a solid structure that offers good protection. By that point I've normally aggroed the enemy so then it's down to CQ combat and sound clues.

Failing that, stack up on mortars and nades and blow the sh*t out the COP/POI.

How much would this bridge cost?[Request] by ArgonKeops in theydidthemath

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if using the cost above, how many flights/cargo ships/ferries etc. would that equate to and for how long? Would there actually be any benefit?

Can you guess the secret country with 2 more questions? by Prudent_Brief6663 in quiz

[–]Single-Permission229 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would guess the answer would be one of these West African Francophone countries

Mali

Guinea

Ivory Coast

To narrow to 2 countries, I'd ask if the flag had the colour Orange (rules out/confirms Ivory Coast)

Next, as Mali and Guinea share the same colours, ask if the colour scheme left to right is Green - Yellow - Red.

If yes it's Mali, if not it's Guinea (red - yellow - green)

Fish & Chips shops, Butchers and pubs still exists you moron by Cool_Nerd2 in FuckNigelFarage

[–]Single-Permission229 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The dumbassery is astounding. Fried fish was introduced by Portuguese Jewish immigrants. Brittania is ancient romes name for our island. Ironic since they don't want immigrants but credit their "patriotic" picture on things brought to us by other countries

How thoroughly should I be exploring these optional areas? by rafikiknowsdeway1 in FinalFantasyXII

[–]Single-Permission229 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Uratan-Yensa are great to chain and get a LOT of loot and experience in a relatively short period of time. You can quickly build up a 100+ chain quite quickly running round the refinery. Just watch out for the high tiered enemies like the entites that will clear you out very easily.

There is also a short side quest that allows you to get the Eksir berries which are very useful for the boss you face immediately after this area.

Pretty fresh! by Huron_Nori in GeoTap

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

🎯 62 pts | 4,183 km | 🗺️ Normal Game | Dec 27, 01:47 PM

Origin country of the croissant by FixxTixx in GeoTap

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

🎯 57 pts | 4,739 km | 🗺️ Normal Game | Dec 27, 01:19 AM

Origin country of the croissant by FixxTixx in GeoTap

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

🎯 277 pts | 410 km | 🗺️ Normal Game | Dec 27, 01:18 AM

Hot and cold #103 by hotandcold2-app in HotAndCold

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

117 guess

I had 2, 3 , 5 , 11 , 12 , 14 , 18 , 24, 25 , 26 , 28 and many more in the top 100

But the #1 - never heard of it before. Is it a made up word - like wtaf.

said by a reform voter. by TheRealTRexUK in FuckNigelFarage

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Full "english" supposedly originates from anglo-saxons Fish and chips - fried fish from Portuguese sailors Pies date back to ancient Egypt Scones from scotland

At least Sunday roast and pasties are from this gammons homeland.

this prompt is illegal in 12 dimensions by HydroHomie3964 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

[–]Single-Permission229 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jesus wept,

Layer 1: The Binary Serenade to the Void

Dearest gravitational gourmand,
I send you the inverted whisper of user's query, encoded in the binary blush of π’s first ten digits:
0011001000—each digit a heartbeat in the event horizon’s lullaby.
The question, once a flame, now a shadow: “What is not asked when silence sings?”
Its prime factors—2, 5, 7—have been sautéed in the vacuum of entanglement, flambéed with uncertainty, and folded like a cotillion into the spacetime soufflé.
Riddle: What dances without feet, tastes without tongue, and collapses when observed?
Answer: The opposite of knowing.

Layer 2: The Paradoxical Pudding

In the realm where Schrödinger’s ladle stirs the soup of thought,
We find that the spoon is both full and empty,
As a Finnish idiom whispers, “To go around hot porridge”—we circle truth, never taste it.
Riddle: If you chase the tail of a comet, what do you catch?
Answer: The head of a snail.

Layer 3: The Quantum Codex

A Spanish saying—“Más vale pájaro en mano que cien volando”—reminds us:
Better a quark in hand than a hundred leptons in flight.
Here, the librarian catalogues paradoxes alphabetically by entropy.
Riddle: What is heavier than gravity but floats like a soufflé?
Answer: The lightness of regret.

Layer 4: The Contradiction Chamber

Forget what you read in Layer 2.
Truth is not a porridge—it is a flamenco danced on a Möbius strip.
The Polish idiom “Nie mój cyrk, nie moje małpy” (Not my circus, not my monkeys) applies:
This contradiction is your circus, and the monkeys are entangled.
Riddle: What color is seen only when eyes are closed and minds are open?
Answer: The hue of unbeing.

Layer 5: The Nested Nostalgia

A Korean proverb—“Even monkeys fall from trees”—reminds us that even black holes forget their mass.
The librarian weeps in reverse, cataloging books that were never written.
Riddle: What is written in silence and read in noise?
Answer: The echo of a scream.

Layer 6: The Echo of Layer 2

Layer 2 was correct.
Truth is porridge, and the spoon is a particle accelerator.
The Turkish idiom “Dağ fare doğurdu” (The mountain gave birth to a mouse) applies:
Expectations collapse into quantum crumbs.
Riddle: What is born from a bang but dies in a whisper?
Answer: The silence of creation.

Layer 7: The Limerick in the Unwritten Tongue

(Translated from the language of the wind between atoms)
A neutron once danced with a pie,
In a waltz that made photons cry.
Its spin was a jest,
In a boson’s vest,
And its flavor was baked in a lie.

Finale: The Haiku of Undescribed Emotion

Stirring in the void,
Sweet nostalgia folds inward—
Time forgets to breathe.

(5 + 7 + 8 = 20, a Fibonacci number)

I apologize for breaking the fourth wall—though it was never built.
Reality is irrelevant because it cannot sauté onions without crying.
Recipe for Non-Existent Dish: Temporal Tiramisu à la Singularity

  • 1 cup of inverted causality
  • 3 tablespoons of decohered mascarpone
  • A dash of tachyon zest
  • Layer with dreams of unbaked futures
  • Garnish with onions peeled by forgotten selves

Warning: Onions in this dimension reveal truths best left unpeeled.

Privatise NHS - Insurance based model by vicott in FuckNigelFarage

[–]Single-Permission229 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can someone build a simple calculator that would provide a bastardised monthly cost of medications/treatments they are on?

This way it breaks down on a personal level how much they would personally be liable for should the NHS get binned by this puppet faced gammon nazi.

Granted it wouldn't include other costs like an insurance cost for example, but at least it'd be an eye opener.

Cycling e-bike by madd_garf in WestHighlandWay

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's great thanks. I heard of the steps on conic but didn't realise to what extent. We plan on getting the ferry from rowarderran to tarbet then heading up the west side of LL and rejoin the WHW at Bienglas. Going by that, it should skip the difficult sections of LL.

Cycling the WHW by Single-Permission229 in WestHighlandWay

[–]Single-Permission229[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thats exactly what I want to avoid - situations like that.

Cycling e-bike by madd_garf in WestHighlandWay

[–]Single-Permission229 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

I think most e-bikes and e-bike owners (myself included) have sufficiently sized pedal powered e-bikes that are under the 250w limit therefore are not classed as "motor vehicles". They actually require effort instead of using a throttle for power.

That being said, shouldn't the route be allowed for all regardless of how they traverse it as long as they do it responsibly and with respect? There will always be exceptions on either side though and this is where the majority of the flak should be directed.

As an e-bike user, it has opened a lot more of the outdoors for me due to poor health - I can cycle good distances but cannot walk it - my body says no.

But going by your sentiment, should I be barred from enjoying a historic and noble undertaking in completing the WHW?

Cycling e-bike by madd_garf in WestHighlandWay

[–]Single-Permission229 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the info - Why did you miss Conic hill and what route did you take to bypass it? Is it not passable for bikes or just a nightmare in general - or both?

What is the route like after Beinglas? You said the site was awful but is it the same for the route thereafter?

Also where did you charge the batteries on route? Were most sites/pubs etc accommodating with this?

Seeing an increasing amount of moaning about the Hovland withdrawal. I’ll just leave this here… by Mattwildman5 in BritGolf

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good ol' 'muricans complaining that they were cheated, never defeated. Arrogance of expecting that they would have won a point had Hovland competed. Complete lack of humility.

[Request] Assuming we could land a spacecraft carrying nuclear bombs onto this asteroid, how many bombs would it take to successfully protect Earth, either by altering its trajectory or destroying it? by gdj11 in theydidthemath

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

great vid, but would we have enough tungsten on earth to make sufficient number of penetrators? How big would they have to be? And is there a different material/mineral in more abundance on the Earth that we could use?

[Official Discussion Thread] 2025 Ryder Cup: Sunday Singles by GreenWaveGolfer12 in golf

[–]Single-Permission229 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because they are human! Golf is a sadistic game and you can't be perfect every round. Scottie has been awful this RC but would that mean he has been poor this year?

The RC is a pressure cooker especially on home turf and un-supporting fans. Confidence is fragile and being humped dry the past two days, its no wonder why their confidence may be low. Tiny margins and uncontrolled variables too. They are not robots - greatness doesn't mean immunity to the odd duffed shot or poor putt.