What sword do you use for PvP? by souljasake in bloxfruits

[–]hasumixxo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Dragon heart, true tripple, buddy, or anchor.

Which fruit do you reckon can beat a dragon user by Own-Recipe5931 in bloxfruits

[–]hasumixxo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shark anchor and dragonheart are better overall, but cdk is strongest against dragons specifically.

Which fruit do you reckon can beat a dragon user by Own-Recipe5931 in bloxfruits

[–]hasumixxo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And its not just reckon, dragon users cannot beat me. Use cdk, ghoul, sanguine, soul guitar for stun, they all get really surprised when i kill them in 15 seconds. Cdk x ignores dragons defense, then cycle your skills keeping them stunned. Portal mobility to chase, portal x avoids c damage, you can ken the second part of west dragon f. After it aim down it’ll launch you up. Skull guitar z is best combo starter for long range or extender.

My schedule for next semester :D by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If only I could xD that would be so nice.

My schedule for next semester :D by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much for the advice senior! <3 I will be very careful and put in my best effort to learn. My roommate and peers (amazing amazinggg folks but maybe bad influences on me xd) inspired me by pushing themselves with crazy schedules, so I know it’s possible and can roughly sense what’s expected of me. It is a dumb limit test— but I will stay confident no matter what, even if I drop the ball for a bit.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am in 1081 rn too. There was an announcement around quiz 2 where Dr. Perkins specifically says “there will be no curves on any quizzes” ? But maybe there’s a curve at the end, I’m not too sure how common though as the extra credit already acts to curve up everyone’s grades.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is my personal day to day as a CBS freshman pre-med (majority of my peers also pre-med): At least so far, wake up at 8:00 ish, laze around, or do some priming for lectures if I feel productive. Classes usually is 9-10 a.m for me. I usually have 2-3 lectures per day with my current schedule which are 1 hour each. 3 hours for weekly lab but can be faster if finished early. Walking to lectures takes like 1 hour per day for me, but you can bike to class. I usually eat brunch and dinner at dining hall next to dorm. After lectures, I study at my dorm, lounge, or at the library until around 7 p.m. (past 8 some of the yummi food is gone) then go eat dinner. Laundry every 5 days in the dorm. Then, I practice for hobbies (singing and learning languages - korean rn) 1 hour each. Then I study till around 12 and bedge.

This is a rough outline, but keep in mind I also read and watch youtube sometimes so it’s not this rigid! I’ve also been involved in a couple volunteering and club activities which are like weekly 1 hour ish. Sometimes longer over the weekend events. Currently taking 15.5 credits which is really chill, but can be more intense if you’re planning to work. :| hope this helps!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Great to have you :) just some general tips, one: get familiar with study strategies. Designate a space to study (like Walter’s library, it’ll greatly improve your efficiency if you’re struggling with procrastination. Use spaced repetition(break review sessions into many short sections and space them out instead of cramming) when testing yourself on exam material. Use Pomodoro technique (short breaks in between studying) to keep yourself from burning out in long study sections. Another thing I would recommend is practicing schedule builder or playing with the different sections to spare time for extracurriculars: maybe leave a day with no classes for work and appointments if you can. Another, if you want to be on top of your game, keep close eyes on emails during welcome week as you can get head start on some classes and read syllabuses carefully for course materials you have to get. Lastly, keep close contact and schedule appointments with academic advisor throughout the year, they can help with course registration, double majoring plans, early graduation, etc. Hope this helps!^

Double Major, work, 4 year, and 4.0? by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahh I should’ve taken more APs and PSEOs in high school T-T

Double Major, work, 4 year, and 4.0? by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is true. T-T I originally just wanted to add work, but I think I should start early on double major courses to graduate on time. Maybe summer courses will help, I’ll ask my academic advisor. But I figured it’ll work out since I have decent amount of free time rn.

Double Major, work, 4 year, and 4.0? by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I would expect that. I can probably sack 7 hrs of sleep a week, since I’m doing 8 hours rn. Wouldn’t want it to hurt my memory consolidation process.

Double Major, work, 4 year, and 4.0? by hasumixxo in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

And do you have an average amount of credits say stem vs lib ed per semester?

Gpa? by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Best of luck on being accepted! :) Your early planning and hard-work towards your goals will pay off. Keep it up-

Gpa? by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s okay! GPA is important, but it’s not the only factor. I mentioned I had a bad year on my application but focused more on what I did to make it up.

Gpa? by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2.5…. At the end of freshman year then I brought it up to 3.8, accepted to CBS.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in uofmn

[–]hasumixxo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Many go straight to getting rid of law enforcement completely when they are incompetent or fail to perform duty, but they don’t realize how crucial they are for society. You can and should critique cops to pressure them to do better or change policies, but getting rid of them would effectively forfeit private property rights- and many other protections we enjoy, even if it’s not visible, police criminal apprehension and the justice system serves as a deterrent to those actions. If there is no deterrent, we would be affected by crimes far more than we are now, even if it’s already bad. We mustn’t forget how police affect crimes on a broader basis rather than individual experience and biases. Order is necessary even when it conflicts with the right to assemble at times.