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1000 results for “legendary_creeper”
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I miss the engagement with my former Discord community (2100+ members) :(
Having almost zero communication with the users of your creations sucks ;(
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I highly recommend checking out the No Telemetry mod by kb1000 for Minecraft Java Edition. It disables the non-GDPR compliant telemetry of Minecraft, since they do not provide the option themselves. It's well maintained, and I'm using it myself since I started playing Java.
Info & Download:
https://modrinth.com/mod/no-telemetry/
https://github.com/kb-1000/no-telemetryReport on the bug tracker:
https://bugs.mojang.com/browse/MC/issues/MC-237493#minecraft #minecraftjavaedition #minecraftjava #minecraftmod #dataprotection #privacy
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I highly recommend checking out the No Telemetry mod by kb1000 for Minecraft Java Edition. It disables the non-GDPR compliant telemetry of Minecraft, since they do not provide the option themselves. It's well maintained, and I'm using it myself since I started playing Java.
Info & Download:
https://modrinth.com/mod/no-telemetry/
https://github.com/kb-1000/no-telemetryReport on the bug tracker:
https://bugs.mojang.com/browse/MC/issues/MC-237493#minecraft #minecraftjavaedition #minecraftjava #minecraftmod #dataprotection #privacy
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I highly recommend checking out the No Telemetry mod by kb1000 for Minecraft Java Edition. It disables the non-GDPR compliant telemetry of Minecraft, since they do not provide the option themselves. It's well maintained, and I'm using it myself since I started playing Java.
Info & Download:
https://modrinth.com/mod/no-telemetry/
https://github.com/kb-1000/no-telemetryReport on the bug tracker:
https://bugs.mojang.com/browse/MC/issues/MC-237493#minecraft #minecraftjavaedition #minecraftjava #minecraftmod #dataprotection #privacy
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Pop Cryptid Spectator #1
In this edition:
- What’s up with this project
- Pop Goes the Cryptid explainer
- r/cryptid aims to be inclusive
- New cryptid media
- Texas’ Chupacabra coaster
- Cryptozoology.com shuttered
Hello! Welcome to the first edition of the Pop Cryptid Spectator, my regular (hopefully) posting of observations and commentary on my current favorite personal project – watching the parade of “cryptids” in popular culture.
I recently recalled that when I was a kid, like 9 years old, I used to collect interesting things about whatever I was interested in at the time and send to my friends or just pretend to be running a newspaper. Here I am, still doing that decades later. It seems to be what I do.
My intent with this regular posting is, roughly:
- To highlight the fun ways legendary or dubious animals are showing up in modern media.
- To explore the expansion of cryptozoology from what was originally framed as a “science-based” endeavor to what is now a mass cultural phenomenon – a profusion of strange entities that are labeled “cryptids”.
- And, to share interesting news bits I find related to “hidden” or legendary creatures.
If you are looking for me to criticize Bigfoot believers, or to make fun of Hodag hunters, there will be none of that. I would suggest that might a.) lighten up because this is not a highly serious subject and, b.) stick around to just enjoy it, because the cryptid scene is crazy right now. It’s so diverse, creative, and complicated. It’s so much more than monster hunting or extinction guilt. Cryptids are a way to express personal and regional identity, attract tourism, inspire art, examine history, explore spiritual ideas, represent liminality and a sense of the “other”. I could go on and on. There is a lot to say. So I’m going to get started.
But, I feel I have to backtrack just a bit first.
Pop Goes the Cryptid
I put out an explainer presentation called Pop Goes the Cryptid a little while ago as part of the Virtual Folk Zoology conference hosted by researcher and data scientist, Floe Foxon. Check it out if you haven’t already. I reworked the presentation a little bit and put it up on my website, as well as re-recording it into a video for people who prefer that. The reaction has been interesting. I received comments by some respected colleagues that highlighted some hot button issues in the cryptozoo. My subsequent post noting these issues just fanned the flames. In short – there is a bifurcated view of the world of cryptozoology in more than one way. And each side can be broken into additional factions. It’s messy. The two opposing camps argue a lot.
First, there is the division between those with a scientific view of cryptozoology and those who embrace the paranormal and supernatural. Now, that is grossly oversimplifying it. I’ll may try to address that at some later time but I think you get the general idea.
There is also a more nuanced break between those who wish cryptozoology would return to a more scientific framework and those who say it never was scientific and might never be. And, that’s also is an oversimplification. You can take a look at my recent writings for more explanation on that dispute.
And, there is the evergreen argument about what does or doesn’t fit under the label of “cryptid”? What’s the definition? How should the word be used? The reasons for the bickering about labels and boundaries is very much under the umbrella of my Pop Cryptid framing. However, I’ll attempt to be neutral in this forum.
Alternative naming
Venturing into the latest goings-on, I begin with a specific dispute regarding the inclusion of two popular “cryptids”. The moderator of the cryptid subreddit has broached the sensitive topic of the use of two entity names that represent Native spiritual creatures. I’ll say them once, with apologies, to clarify. It is common to see Skinwalker and Wendigo referred to as “cryptids” in the broadest sense of being secretive or hidden creatures of dubious existence. They are in no way zoological animals to be named and collected, which is why many on the subreddit don’t think they should be mentioned at all. However, they are both extremely popular in media. The “what is a cryptid” question remains the core of contention. For now, the moderator is asking contributors to come up with alternative names for these two beings. The ’S’ word has already been substituted with options “flesh gait”, “flesh pedestrian” (which is objectively stupid) and “pale crawler” based on modern storytelling, not indigenous lore. The W creature doesn’t seem to have a ready substitution, and the floor is open to suggestions. If you are familiar with the legend of the cannibal monster with a heart of ice, you probably noticed how the modern depictions play fast and loose with the lore.
And they will continue to change because they are not physical things able to captured and measured, they can morph into whatever we need them to be.
New cryptid media
The venerable Adrian Shine has a new book out on sea creatures titled A Natural History of Sea Serpents. You certainly know him – he’s the exceptionally bearded scholar of Loch Ness legends. The book was out in the UK in October and is now available in US markets and looks like a worthy volume.
Jenna Ortega and Paul Rudd are starring in a very bizarre-looking film featuring life-saving and life-threatening unicorns. In a setup that reminds me of Harry and the Henderson’s, they have a vehicular encounter with the magical creature. Death of a Unicorn is set to be released in the next few months.
Once again, we see how the line between cryptid and not-a-cryptid is more porous than a bad email spam filter. The title unicorn is labeled in at least in some media outlets as a cryptid even though it historically was not seen as such. However, in this case, it seems to literally be one.
Six Flags Fiesta Texas amusement park in San Antonio announced that it’s changing the branding of its Goliath roller coaster into that of the Chupacabra. The news release for the transformation includes mention of the chupa as a “Texas folklore legend”. Indeed! I was interested to see which version of the chupacabra they picked – the spiky alien kangaroo or the mangy vampire dog. Turns out they combined them both and added additional parts, embracing the chupacabra tradition of being a cultural shape-shifter representing any weird thing that looks scary.
Loss of an OG cryptid website
WordPress sent me a notice that I’ve been blogging for 18 years on that platform. But 25 years ago, there was cryptozoology.com. The site was registered in 1998, before some of you were even aware that the subject, or the internet, even existed. The site had articles about lots of popular creatures and stuck mostly to the zoological framing, as much as I can remember. I hadn’t visited in a while but, when looking for other cryptid forums online, I checked in. And it was gone. Shut down. This happened in (oops) November 2022! The domain name is still registered for the next several years. I have no clue as to what might happen to the site.
During those 25 years, the scene changed drastically. Most of the content on cryptids has shifted to Cryptid Wiki which includes more modern media and depiction of many new creatures that seem to appear or resurface from the past on a weekly basis.
Will the original .com site return all new and shiny? If it doesn’t, what a lost opportunity. However, the loss of this place on the web feeds into the Pop Cryptid trend very neatly. People don’t do an internet search for the word “cryptozoology” like they do for “cryptids”. The zoology part, while still guarded by the stalwart old-school gatekeepers, is completely overrun by the pop cryptid scene all over the web that deals in folk horror, AI and game-based creatures, cosplayers, DeviantArtists, and pokecryptids. Although a bit sad, it seems appropriate that cryptozoology.com would fade away at this time as a symbol of how things used to be.
For more on this trend from cryptozoology to cryptids, check out my post called “Cryptid” out-trends “cryptozoology”, which includes the Google trends data results comparing the two terms. There is a story being told there.
Pop Goes the Cryptid Facebook group
If you are still on Facebook, I have a page where I drop all the links I find to new cryptid content. Read them there first at facebook.com/Popcryptids
Here are some recent posts:
- Cryptid dogs subreddit r/crytpiddogs
- A Russian creature called the Witkes that may have been inspired by buried frozen mammoth carcasses
- A cryptid themed holiday bar that popped up in Wilmington, NC
- A cryptid themed band called Beach Creeper. Their surf rock content is creative and cover art is hilarious. Check them out on BandCamp.
That’s all wrap for the Pop Cryptid Spectator. I hope to be back soon to supply new observations from the world of mystery creatures.
Go to SharonAHill.com and click on Pop goes the Cryptid landing page. While you’re there, make sure you subscribe to all the posts – it’s always free and I don’t send annoying spam.
You can also email me with comments, suggestions or questions at Popcryptid(at)proton.me
Watch the video version of Pop Cryptid Spectator on my YouTube channel.
#1 #chupacabra #cryptid #Cryptozoology #deathOfAUnicorn #popCryptid #reddit #rollerCoaster #scientific #seaSerpents #Skinwalker #Wendigo
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MultiSearch Tag Explorer -
#LEGENDARY #LOVERS #SONG allgraph.ro/advanced-sea... #SOMETHING #HAPPENED ON #THE #WAY TO #HEAVEN multi-search-tag-explorer.aepiot.ro/advanced-sea... Semantic SEO: The Bridge between Humans and AI. AÉPIOT ( #aePiot ): INDEPENDENT SEMANTIC WEB 4.0 INFRASTRUCTURE (EST. 2009): aepiot.com
MultiSearch Tag Explorer -
Book Promotion: When a world is broken who or what can put it back together? Obviously not Miralees, she's just an acrobat with her family troupe.
Read "Dragons of the Wounded Land"
#epic #lesfic #lesbian #audiobook #writing #fedibookfair #phantastik #heroines #romantasy #amreading #romancelandia #dragons #wlw #sorcery #boost #secondaryworld #queerwritersuplift #readers #reading #monsters #magic #sapphic #fantasy #goodbooks #legendary (29b9) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FCDHT9RF?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon -
Legendary Australian cowboy Troy Dunn swaps bulls for boxing https://www.byteseu.com/2005919/ #Australia #BullRiding #Cowboy #rodeo #TroyDunn #WorldTitle
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Legendary Nintendo Designer Takashi Tezuka Set to Retire
https://www.ign.com/articles/legendary-nintendo-designer-takashi-tezuka-set-to-retire
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Legendary Red Sox stars to descend upon Fenway this week for special events https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/691291/ #Baseball #BillMueller #BostonRedSox #CarlYastrzemski #CarltonFisk #DavidOrtiz #FenwayPark #HallOfFame #JimRice #JohnnyDamon #JonLester #MikeTimlin #MLB #PedroMartinez #Rays #ShermFeller #TampaBay #TampaBayRays #TampaBay #TampaBayRays #WadeBoggs
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Legendary Red Sox stars to descend upon Fenway this week for special events https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/691291/ #Baseball #BillMueller #BostonRedSox #CarlYastrzemski #CarltonFisk #DavidOrtiz #FenwayPark #HallOfFame #JimRice #JohnnyDamon #JonLester #MikeTimlin #MLB #PedroMartinez #Rays #ShermFeller #TampaBay #TampaBayRays #TampaBay #TampaBayRays #WadeBoggs
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Legendary wrestling star reveals he was ‘banned’ from joining Gladiator 26 years ago
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Legendary ZSNES Nintendo emulator rewritten from scratch with GPU-acceleration, no vibe coding — new Super ZSNES has ‘far more accurate CPU and audio cores than the original’
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Legendary Stories of Fort Totten, North Dakota Historic Site
Fort Totten, North Dakota, is an historic site with a diverse history. Its well-preserved buildings, authentic artifacts, and documented stories make it one of the state’s must-see historic sites. Indeed, Fort Totten is a lot more than a quick stop on a holiday itinerary!
Saddle & uniform in front of large photo of historic Fort Totten. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.Linda’s Pick of the Exhibits
My favorite exhibit at Fort Totten was the gardening section. Perhaps it was the season or my return to gardening myself!
At any rate, according to Mandan history, one of the tribe’s founders was Yellow Corn Maiden. The legend goes that she saved the first corn crop from Sun Man’s burning rays and taught him that the corn should be forever safe from his attacks.
Historic buildings at Fort Totten. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.Interestingly, the Hidatsa people had a very precise method of planting their gardens. First, in early April, they planted the perimeter of the garden with sunflowers. Next came the most important crop–the corn. If the plants were touched by frost or bugs, the corn was replanted until the middle of May. Finally, they planted beans, squash, and pumpkins.
The Carrying the Corn dance was performed in the early spring. Its purpose? To sanctify the planting season and find blessing from the Great One Above to make the fields thrive.
Gardens were also important to the inhabitants of the Fort!
Fast Fact: During the fall of 1868 and the winter of 1868-69, after the supply of vegetables from the garden was exhausted, the following articles of food...were found effectual in preventing scurvy...Per 100 rations, ten pounds of dried fruit and five gallons of krout or curried cabbage twice a week; one gallon of molasses, twenty-five pounds of corn meal, and two and one-half gallons of pickles once a week.
~ Assistant Surgeon J.P. Kimball, Fort Buford, 1870 [Fort Totten display quote]What’s at Fort Totten Historical Site?
The Fort Totten Historical Site consists of around 10 acres of land located within the boundaries of the Fort Totten Indian Reservation. It’s on the southeastern edge of the town of Fort Totten.
Collection of Indigenous artifacts. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.So, where does the site’s name come from? It’s from the Totten Trail, which was an overland route from southern Minnesota to the goldfields of Western Montana.
Fast Fact: Fort Totten became a state historic site in 1960. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
Fort Totten had three distinct periods of usage before becoming an historic site. My favorite was the first, its frontier history. It’s one of the best preserved of the nearly 150 forts constructed on the western frontier.
What are the main periods in Fort Totten’s history?The three time periods include:
- Frontier Military Post – 1867 to 1890
- Decommissioned and transferred to the Bureau of Indian Affairs in January of 1891 for use as an Indian school
- The Industrial boarding school operated until 1935. Between 1935 and 1939, the site was a tuberculosis preventorium run by the Federal Government. The preventorium provided a boarding school for children at high risk of contracting TB. It returned to being a day and boarding school until 1959.
Established in 1867, the post’s main function was to serve American Indian Policy. Soldiers enforced the peace among settlers near Devils Lake and the Dakota people living on the reservation around it.
How did Devils Lake get its name? It comes from the Dakota phrase Mni Wakan, which means Spirit Water or sacred water. Early Europeans to the area, however, didn’t get the translation quite right. They interpreted the name to be something like a bad spirit. Eventually, that turned into the name Devils Lake.
Pin me!Of course, the main feature of the Fort’s frontier era is the 16 original buildings. They’ve all been well preserved and maintained, initially by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Then, in 1959, the school was gifted to the state.
The original buildings, of course, served different purposes over the 93 years before Fort Totten became a state historic site.
My favorite buildings? The Captain/1st Lieutenant Quarters with their historical furnishings.
Some of the artifacts I found interesting included:
- Officer’s dress sabre belt (circa 1860s)
- 7th Cavalry horse blanket and saddle (circa 1880s)
- Wood canteen (circa 1860s)
- 7th Cavalry helmet with horse hair plume (circa 1880s)
A self-guided tour takes visitors through the site with access to many of the buildings and window exhibit panels in others. Historic photos are used to bring the stories, especially of the lives of children who lived in the Industrial schools, to life.
On the tour, visitors can choose to follow a soldier, a young female Chippewa student, a teacher, or a teenage male Dakota student. The stories are based on oral histories collected from Spirit Lake tribal members and other accounts.
Student Life at Fort Totten
Display covering the school at Fort Totten. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.The reservation had been assigned to the Catholic Church by the Board of Commissioners of Indian Affairs. So religious education was part of daily life.
Life, as shown in the exhibits, was militant. Children wore uniforms to ensure uniformity and were required to speak English. To accomplish this, children from various tribes were often grouped together to restrict their use of their first language and birth customs.
Punishments for speaking their own language could be severe, as assimilation into the greater population was a main educational goal.
Many of the artifacts on display are from local Indigenous people.
They include such fascinating items as a deer hoof ceremonial necklace (circa 1920) and a Sioux quilled horse hair ornament.
Pin me!Fast Fact: After Fort Totten became a school, the powder magazine floor was lowered and used for storing flour. Why? About 400 pounds of flour were used daily! That's a lot of flour -- roughly 1 pound of flour daily for the 400 residents.
Pioneer Daughters of the Lake Region Museum
Sign and entrance for the Pioneer Daughters of the Lake Region Museum. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.Fort Totten is also home to the Lake Region Pioneer Daughters Museum. It’s situated in the fort’s old hospital/school cafeteria building (Building 7). While the museum isn’t very large, it’s packed with interesting artifacts.
The Pioneer Daughters museum does an excellent job of displaying the collection. All of the pioneer-era household objects are identified and labelled with the names of the people who donated them. Artifacts range from the Minnie H steamboat’s anchor to silver dinnerware service to children’s toys.
Toys in the Lake Region Pioneer Daughters Museum. Photo by Linda Aksomitis.There’s also an on-site Totten Trail Historic Inn. Each room has a distinctive personality and historic furnishings that let you immerse yourself in history.
Linda’s Road Trip Tips
We visited Fort Totten on a weekend getaway in Devils Lake, North Dakota. While we’d passed through the small city on many trips, we’d always been interested in learning more about both the city and the lake.
Pin me!Devils Lake deserves a quick stop, even if you’re just driving through North Dakota on U.S. Highway 2.
Its Downtown Devils Lake Commercial District has 47 properties built between 1885 and 1937.
Most are brick, but there are a wide variety of architectural styles.
We enjoyed the Lake Region Heritage Center, which is housed in the historic U.S. Post Office building.
The regional history was very interesting. As well, the Sheriff’s House Museum was a great stop!
Our favorite dining spot? The Old Main Street Cafe. Prices were good and the taste was great. David enjoyed a steak dinner while I ordered the Rolette chicken fillet served on wild rice. If you don’t have time for a full meal, take a coffee break to get a peek at the pictures on the wall illustrating area history.
Who Should Visit the Fort Totten Historic Site?
Fort Totten is a great family destination for travelers. There’s lots of space for the kids to run around the lawn in the shade of aged trees.
From an historical perspective, the glance into American Indian boarding schools is particularly interesting for the whole family.
The experience can provide an opportunity for families to consider what it was like for children to grow up in an institution focused on making them forget the culture they were born into.
Since the exhibits are in various historic buildings, seeing everything may be challenging for visitors who have mobility issues.
The grounds are generally flat and walkable, with more accessible options at the on-site Pioneer Daughters Museum area.
Restrooms are generally accessible.
Pin me!We spent about an hour and a half going through the displays and enjoying the grounds.
How Do You Visit Fort Totten?
Fort Totten is located on a peninsula on the southeastern edge of Devils Lake, about 12 miles south of the city of Devils Lake, North Dakota.
Parking: There's lots of free parking available at the site.
Street Address: 417 Cavalry Circle, Fort Totten, North Dakota
The museum is open seasonally to the general public, with the option to arrange a visit at other times of the year. Check the website for details.
Keep up to date with what’s happening on the Fort Totten State Historic Facebook page.
Learn more with this YouTube video, Forgotten Fort Totten, North Dakota -[Old West Forts] from American Old West Tales.
Plan your visit with Google maps.
Find More Museum Reviews for North Dakota
Check out more reviews of museum attractions in North Dakota on guide2museums.com.
Discover More Historic Sites
- Legendary Stories of Fort Totten, North Dakota Historic Site
- Chinatown in Montreal: A Fascinating Historic Site
- Canada’s Little-Known Cold War Museum: the Diefenbunker
- Discover the Mormon Handcart Historic Site & Devil’s Gate in Wyoming
- Historic Home of 1800s Governor in Lafayette, LA: Alexandre Mouton
- See 100 Miles Across Nebraska From Scotts Bluff National Monument
- Bishop’s Palace in Galveston, Texas: Victorian Era Castle
- Rip Van Winkle Gardens & Historic Mansion: Jefferson Island, Louisiana
- Robinson Roadhouse & Robinson Flag Station: Yukon Ghost Town
- USS Lexington Museum: WWII Aircraft Carrier in Corpus Christi, Texas
- Watson Lake Sign Post Forest Historic Site: Watson Lake, Yukon
- Medalta Museum: Ceramic Arts in Medicine Hat, Alberta
- Claybank Brick Plant National Historic Site: Claybank, Saskatchewan
- The Sheriff’s House Museum & Historic Site: A Hidden Gem in Devils Lake, North Dakota
- Soo Line Historical Museum & Historic Site: Weyburn, Saskatchewan
- Texas Seaport Museum: Gulf Coast History in Galveston, Texas
- Fred Light Museum: Battleford, Saskatchewan
- Frontier Prison Museum: Rawlins, Wyoming
- Toronto’s First Post Office Museum & National Historic Site: Ontario
- The Bastion: Designated Historic Place, Nanaimo, British Columbia
- Hearst Castle: National Historic Landmark in San Simeon, California
- Inglis Grain Elevators National Historic Site: Agricultural History in Inglis, Manitoba
- Evergreen Plantation: National Landmark Site in Edgard, Louisiana
- Cannington Manor Provincial Historic Park: Rich Lifestyles in 1880s Saskatchewan
- Mystic Seaport Museum: Historic Seafaring Village in Mystic, Connecticut
- National Doukhobor Heritage Village: Veregin, Saskatchewan
- Manhattan Project National Historical Park: WWII History in Hanford, Washington
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Legendary Pilots, a casual flightsim with business management elements from MicroProse, with beautiful retro pixelart (or perhaps “visuals alluding to 90s 3D with minimal AA”), released on Steam
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2393730/Legendary_Pilots/
#flightsim #sim #tycoon #casual #indiegame #games #gaming #microprose
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Legendary Pilots, a casual flightsim with business management elements from MicroProse, with beautiful retro pixelart (or perhaps “visuals alluding to 90s 3D with minimal AA”), released on Steam
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2393730/Legendary_Pilots/
#flightsim #sim #tycoon #casual #indiegame #games #gaming #microprose
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Legendary Pilots, a casual flightsim with business management elements from MicroProse, with beautiful retro pixelart (or perhaps “visuals alluding to 90s 3D with minimal AA”), released on Steam
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2393730/Legendary_Pilots/
#flightsim #sim #tycoon #casual #indiegame #games #gaming #microprose
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Legendary Pilots, a casual flightsim with business management elements from MicroProse, with beautiful retro pixelart (or perhaps “visuals alluding to 90s 3D with minimal AA”), released on Steam
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2393730/Legendary_Pilots/
#flightsim #sim #tycoon #casual #indiegame #games #gaming #microprose
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Legendary Pilots, a casual flightsim with business management elements from MicroProse, with beautiful retro pixelart (or perhaps “visuals alluding to 90s 3D with minimal AA”), released on Steam
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2393730/Legendary_Pilots/
#flightsim #sim #tycoon #casual #indiegame #games #gaming #microprose
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Legendary College Football Venue Named The Loudest Stadium In The SEC https://www.rawchili.com/nfl/866754/ #AlabamaCrimsonTide #AuburnTigers #BatonRouge #CollegeFootball #DeathValley #FloridaGators #Football #LaneKiffin #LSUTigers #NeylandStadium #OklahomaSooners #SEC #TennesseeVolunteers #TigerStadium
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Legendary College Football Venue Named The Loudest Stadium In The SEC https://www.rawchili.com/nfl/866754/ #AlabamaCrimsonTide #AuburnTigers #BatonRouge #CollegeFootball #DeathValley #FloridaGators #Football #LaneKiffin #LSUTigers #NeylandStadium #OklahomaSooners #SEC #TennesseeVolunteers #TigerStadium
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Legendary Pilots llega este mes – Un simulador de vuelo estilizado donde tu carrera es el verdadero viaje
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Legendary Indian singer Asha Bhosle dies aged 92 https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/apr/12/indian-singer-asha-bhosle-dies-aged-92 #AshaBhosle #India #Music #Culture #WorldNews #SouthAndCentralAsia #Bollywood
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Legendary playback singer Asha Bhosle passed away at 92, with the film industry mourning the loss of an iconic voice. https://english.mathrubhumi.com/movies-music/news/asha-bhosle-passes-away-2026-tributes-film-industry-bollywood-i134904w?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #AshaBhosle #Bollywood #IndianMusic #Tribute #FilmIndustry
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Legendary singer Asha Bhosle has been admitted to a Mumbai hospital after a chest infection and exhaustion. PM Modi and fans across India have wished her a speedy recovery. https://english.mathrubhumi.com/movies-music/news/asha-bhosle-hospitalised-modi-health-update-k1vu8eta?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #singer #AshaBhosle #admitted #MumbaiHospital #PMModi
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Legendary singer SP Balasubrahmanyam was honoured in Kerala with a statue and memorial, as his son SPB Charan shared a heartfelt note of gratitude. https://english.mathrubhumi.com/movies-music/news/sp-balasubrahmanyam-statue-kerala-spb-charan-emotional-note-palakkad-jz8p6h6c?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=mastodon #SPBalasubrahmanyam #SPB #MusicLegend #IndianMusic #Palakkad
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Legendary April Fools' Prank Involved Fake Volcanic Eruption in Sitka, Alaska
📰 Original title: El hombre que simuló una erupción volcánica como broma de April Fools
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/legendary-april-fools-prank-involved-fake-volcanic-eruption-in-sitka-alaska/?redirpost=8588ab77-192f-47e3-9dca-592bbcf128b6
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Manchester Evening News: Number one for news, opinion, sport & celebrity news [Unofficial] @[email protected] ·Legendary Manchester DJ James Stannage dies aged 76