Replies to mrdragon, page 33
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@mrdragon "Irene Andersen was born in Denmark in 1966. Raised in Malmo but moved to Gothenburg when she was 20, Irene spent years in the gym, and worked hard to build this wonderful body, one of the most successful among female bodybuilders."
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@mrdragon But it's filthy
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@mrdragon It has your name sewn on it
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@mrdragon How did it find it's way into my bedroll?
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@mrdragon Yes.
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@mrdragon And I need to have my eyes examined.
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@mrdragon hi
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@mrdragon MEh. how is it going?
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@mrdragon ooh
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@mrdragon Yes, we probably had.
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@mrdragon I kind of have a feud with buying games online. I always tought buying as an alternative to having to wait for the game to download, but having to pay for a game AND then downloading it? Would rather download it for free.
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@mrdragon I always download games to try them. If they're really good I consider buying them, but going and buying something you haven't tried is a bad idea.
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@mrdragon I found a 2.75GB download, if it's bad I'll just delete it.
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@mrdragon just because one sold for 2,500 doesn't mean I'll spend $450 with no complaints. xDD
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@mrdragon 1 and a half ago....... legit
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@mrdragon Couldn't expect less from you.
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@mrdragon well...
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@mrdragon when bad stuff are happening i ususally disappear from here
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@mrdragon u dont think im stupid do you ? :3
Sunday, 14-Apr-13 17:16:19 UTC from web -
@redenchilada @mrdragon This site's nature is not compatible with the splintered bronydom of these last months. What makes this site better than others is also it's downside. RDN outclasses other sites in regards to community, but it is limited in the amount of users that can coexist at any given time because of the way it works. This site focuses in making a community out of many different people, while other social sites focus on splintered groups of similar people. The appeal of RDN is that feeling of all the community knowing eachother, that feeling of "home" that no other place has, and that is exactly why there will never be thousands of active users. Other sites work in "circles" of users with no given number of them, separate from eachother, which could only be accomplished here by shifting activity from public to personal. In short, RDN is like a town, where all the people know eachother, while other social networks are like cities with thousands of strangers walking by.
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@mrdragon Eh. It's not too bad, at least; if you look at the place as a community instead of a social network it's very good at that job. I guess I just think about things like this too much.
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@mrdragon See, that's exactly the problem. Our old niche has been taken and we really haven't been able to come up with a new one.
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@mrdragon I dunno, maybe the site design focuses too much on Public. It really gives off that "this place is just a big chatroom" vibe, and it'd be nice to see a bit of actual networking here and there instead of the place being dominated by a few active users asking each other what they had for lunch. Maybe it's just me, though.
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@mrdragon In my perfect world more places would be like this but I get that the open "you can find everything on Public" approach doesn't work for most sites. (Plus it leads to the place being more of a chat room and less of a real social network, but whatever.)
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@mrdragon If a site throws the registration form right at you and doesn't let you look around first it shouldn't be on the internet imo
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@mrdragon :O ....
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@mrdragon i'm just messing arround for somedays.. i will change back to mushi soon