- Joined
- Jul 1, 2015
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Thanks for the new profile banner.Some crazed woman has an Elon Musk shrine, of out anything to go all out consoom mode, and to making a shrine:
View attachment 3351558
It still amazes me how crazy Tesla Stans are, compared to other car models and brands. It's like they have the bad qualities of Anime, K-Pop, and Pro Wrestling Stans, all over an EV brand.
I hate pokemon so much.
Good design has its price. I don't know why you are so MATI over me liking expensive stuff.Yeah, and $500 for a "private use" hair dryer is ridiculous.
Not really. The thread is for cringe posts, and your posts are really fucking cringe.lol, you sure about that?
View attachment 3350909
Running off to the private donors-only board to whine reeks of MATI to me.
In the first post I've said I bought it for the design, it is not my fault you can't read.>Sensor somehow makes $50 hair dryer worth $500.
Whew, lad.
My mums a hairdress and she said ur a fgt.Aside from hairdressers
I wish my e-friends would stop arguing over overpriced Swedish hairdryers.I wish my e-friends would shut up about a rock paper scissors game that hasn't been changed in 25 years
It is within the threads topic, but ye. It's fucking gay, I don't know why it matters. Just decided to take the bait just to humour you, as the thread is a little slow now.I wish my e-friends would stop arguing over overpriced Swedish hairdryers.
Not jamming the drier into your hair or holding it in place for a long time also results in a lack of burnt hair. All you really have to do is focus on roots down to tips, taking care to get each layer. I find the hardest part to not get burns is when the hair is thoroughly soaked so I'd towel dry it first (it'll set in place when completely dry unless you use products).I say this as someone with absurdly long hair. It is extremely easy to avoid burning your hair by not using a blow drier at all.
I remember a few years back there was this guy who went by the username St4ck who got a custom steam sale badge with his profile picture on it because he spent $80,000 to level the badge up to level 100,000. He was a middle eastern prince or something and had photos taken in a really opulent bedroom with a pet chimp.Steam badge collection in general, you see people with an utterly absurd number of levels which requires crafting badges that range in price from very cheap (~40c total for a level) to around $1 or more depending on normal or foil.
The level requirements also scale so people with thousands of levels require millions of XP to get there, keep in mind badges only give 100 xp per badge level, so you can guess just how much in total was spent for big numbers.
He was still going up until Steam Awards 2019 it seems in terms of badge collection, now sitting on a total level of 5000 with a total XP count of 125,287,316. This is approximately 1.25 million badge levels (not accounting for free badges like Community badges, year badges, etc). I suppose being number 1 on Steam levels to such an unreachable degree is chump change compared to an expensive car or anything else of the sort.I remember a few years back there was this guy who went by the username St4ck who got a custom steam sale badge with his profile picture on it because he spent $80,000 to level the badge up to level 100,000. He was a middle eastern prince or something and had photos taken in a really opulent bedroom with a pet chimp.
View attachment 3352497
View attachment 3352487
This actually helped me kick the habit of buying games on sale. It took me seeing the badge "this user has over 200 games" to realize what a massive fucking faggot I am and stop throwing money at Steam. That was maybe four years ago and I still haven't had the time to play all the games I have in my collection.Has anyone seen those guys on Steam that just collect games more than anything? I think it became a much bigger problem with the introduction of badges, since one of them displays exactly how many games you have.
I suppose this is also why I've reduced my spending due to having over 200 games as well. This is probably also why Steam added that points shop shit which nets you points from buying shit like games or market stuff to encourage bigger spending for stupid shit.This actually helped me kick the habit of buying games on sale. It took me seeing the badge "this user has over 200 games" to realize what a massive fucking faggot I am and stop throwing money at Steam. That was maybe four years ago and I still haven't had the time to play all the games I have in my collection.
I knew a dude who for the longest time had every Team Fortress 2 item you can imagine before they really went nuts on hat effects. He must of spent thousands before he realized "Ok this is going to break me." At the time I was impressed, but now I think it's pathetic.Speaking of the digital trading scene, anyone remember that one trader with a Burning Team Captain (no longer the absolute rarest TF2 item, but remains generally the most expensive by being the original big item) who got VAC banned? I remember the guy put up a description that read like cope and how it was totally intentional (but it's pretty obvious he got caught in one of the big VAC waves back in the day), can't remember who it was so I haven't got screenshots. At this point this is kinda crossing over with the TF2 Community thread here, though.
Reminds me of card games. It's crazy how much money certain cards cost just due to how good they are. Few months back I opened a card pack (Yugioh) just for fun and managed to get a 120$ single spell card. Certain others I want cost around the same. It's impressive when I find people who can make solid decks on a budget, but it's hard these days. Heard this applies to MTG and Pokemon as well.I used to be f2p in a gacha that you could trade anything in-game in, whales would get immensely mad at people getting to the top of leaderboards through means that don't require spending at all and said whales were also often the ones who'd then get banned for RMTing. The desire to be at and stay at the top tends to be a strong driver for whaling harder and harder for certain people.
Thanks for reminding me. Hilarious.I remember the guy put up a description that read like cope and how it was totally intentional
There's nothing quite like clicking on the Steam profile of someone who has clearly spent too much on worthless Humble bundles and seeing their game completion rate is below 15%. Think of all the mini transactions made on cards, emotes, Steam store credits, and items in other games like TF2 unusuals... just go for achievements it's time better spentI suppose this is also why I've reduced my spending due to having over 200 games as well. This is probably also why Steam added that points shop shit which nets you points from buying shit like games or market stuff to encourage bigger spending for stupid shit.
It's additional means to encourage spending and product consumption.
Speaking of the digital trading scene, anyone remember that one trader with a Burning Team Captain (no longer the absolute rarest TF2 item, but remains generally the most expensive by being the original big item) who got VAC banned? I remember the guy put up a description that read like cope and how it was totally intentional (but it's pretty obvious he got caught in one of the big VAC waves back in the day), can't remember who it was so I haven't got screenshots. At this point this is kinda crossing over with the TF2 Community thread here, though.
In general digital trading communities are heavy consumers, they often are extensive whales and usually have the top guys prey on people with no idea of the value of their stuff, and then turn around and get mad at anyone else doing the same thing. I used to be f2p in a gacha that you could trade anything in-game in, whales would get immensely mad at people getting to the top of leaderboards through means that don't require spending at all and said whales were also often the ones who'd then get banned for RMTing. The desire to be at and stay at the top tends to be a strong driver for whaling harder and harder for certain people.
So it turns out Valve was a pioneer of NFT's long before they were even called NFT's!Apologies for a double post, but I should reiterate that this hat is worth about $20k.
Funnily enough, Valve never assigned a value to the items themselves officially, and I believe the TF2 crate system is the original video game lootbox. That lack of official value is how TCGs like MTG and TGO avoid gambling laws, the market of players decides the value. This approach is also how lootboxes got away with shit for very long up until governments started to take notice (the main factor behind govs noticing was probably a combination of both Fortnite lootboxes and CS:GO gambling sites).So it turns out Valve was a pioneer of NFT's long before they were even called NFT's!
Twenty thousand dollars for a fucking virtual hat. We're never gonna make it out of our own solar system, are we?
Because when you need someone with a lack of good taste and tons of money there really is no substitute for an Arab.I remember a few years back there was this guy who went by the username St4ck who got a custom steam sale badge with his profile picture on it because he spent $80,000 to level the badge up to level 100,000. He was a middle eastern prince or something and had photos taken in a really opulent bedroom with a pet chimp.
View attachment 3352497
View attachment 3352487