Check out all of the details of this month's Patch Notes, featuring the Mini-games + Quality of Life Update! https://mabinogi.nexon.net/news/91106/mini-games-quality-of-life-update-patch-notes-april-11th
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Habimaru

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Habimaru
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  • Why are you trying to return to Mabinog ? O_O

    (Regarding GPU) Is that all ? A lot of people seem to have gone the «Mobile-Games» route lately.
    I don't see how your «choices» are limited given how there must be like billions of games in existence by now.
    Far too many «mobile-games» to count, and, if you use a VPN and/or GPS-Location-Changer for your device, you can even get «Advertisements» for games that are only available/advertised to other countries, too. I suppose the only issue there is as to whether or not you can actually read their language in order to be able to even play those other foreign-language games...
    Julie wrote: »
    I have a bad gpu right now and not many choices of games to play other tan old ones, i got bored and got hit nostalgia so i came back here.
    Spoiler-Content : Examples of what you might find advertised to you using a Tokyo/Japan GPS/VPN-Location...
    uEmccd5.jpg
    MARUMFh.jpg
    Julie
  • The Greatest Scientist(s) Throughout History...

    Many people think of names like Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison, Stephen Hawking, etc.

    Sure, they are well-known, but there are others who have made incredible discoveries, too.
    Some more names that come to mind are Nikola Tesla, Dr. Royal Raymond Rife, and another I will leave unnamed for now.

    For now, find out more about Dr. Royal Raymond Rife, and also (unrelated) about the Wimhurst-Device.

    Some people know about Isochronic-Tones & Binaural-Beats, but, they are also sometimes called Rife-Frequencies.

    Anyway, Raymond Rife was incredible, and many people continue to turn to this technology where other methods have failed.
    Kensamaofmari
  • Nexon Do something

    Dunbar-town is too small for the amount of people that congregate at that location.
    The map ought to be expanded, the city made bigger, perhaps even bigger than Tara or at least Tail-tea-n.
    Most people usually stay by the bank, but, because of the number of bank-dwellers...
    ...more banking branches (and mail-boxes) should thus also spread out throughout the town/city/etc.
    The more of the population that is concentrated in one location the more it will attract spam-vert-isers.

    Continent-Warp should not auto-default solely to Dunbar-town.
    Although Continent-Warp to Iria is race-specific in terms of which town where one will land...
    ...especially after the Saga-series... options ought to be available as to which town one wants to hop.
    With the amount of content that now exists, and the size of everything, old travel-restrictions are obsolete.

    Get the population to spread out more and any spam-bot can be avoided by going to a different bank...
    ...unless of course they end up stationed at every bank or Milletians stubbornly stay at one branch anyway.
    I also have access to plenty of other creative ideas to make them less of a nuisance but that's for some other day.
    Bronzebreak
  • I think it's time.

    Pay me. You all should be staying at home anyway and NOT get in the way of those Military Operations.
    Hope you have all stocked up on enough food and resources to last for 6 months holed up at home...
    Also, the police do not own the roads, because the cities they work for are incorporated (i.e.: they're corporations).
    Would you take a Security Patrol Man from a McDonald's Patrol Car seriously ? Same thing with City Police.

    Either way, I have literally stopped caring long ago, but if you really want to know what is really happening...
    https://www.bitchute.com/video/czJ7SP4x2doH/
    [Approximate Duration : 2 hours (explains why and how the entire Legal-System is rigged and what's being done about it)]
    Crimsọn
  • Nano-Robots INSIDE YOUR BODY...!

    I do not know why the general-public does not discuss things like this very much (wait, actually, I do know why, but that is not currently relevant for purposes of this thread [purpose: I just wish to gauge current perceptions {from the poll-options} that some of us may have over the idea of nano-bot technology in the human-body... particularly as it relates to medical-purposes]), but this technology has literally already been around for years and years now, and so has a LOT of other things that I know about which most of the world-population still seems to have never heard of before (nor will most of you ever hear about them for reasons I will be keeping «classified» for now).

    You do not need to respond. I will try to make the poll-options fairly inclusive/comprensive to cover many possibilities.

    Following Spoiler-Content : Description from a [YouKnowWho]Tube video of a TEDxZurich talk by Brad Nelson
    We learned of the existence of bacteria over 300 years ago and we have far more of them in our bodies than human cells, but it was less than 40 years ago when we first realized how they swim. With the discovery of the rotary motor of E. coli in 1973, a motor just 45 nanometers in diameter, some claimed this incredible mechanism as evidence of God, though it is really just a step along the path of evolution. Now we can actually build nanorobots that swim similar to bacteria like E. coli. We're working to use these to deliver drugs to specific locations in the body. E. coli itself is a kind of robot: it has sensors (chemoreceptors), motors, communication along protein guided pathways, and software (DNA). When we look at a bacterium from this perspective it seems like a machine, even one that we will be hopefully able to duplicate someday. So if bacteria are really just machines then what are we?

    Brad Nelson is the Professor of Robotics and Intelligent Systems at ETH Zürich where his primary research focus is on microrobotics and nanorobotics with an emphasis on applications in biology and medicine. He studied mechanical engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of Minnesota and robotics at Carnegie Mellon University. He has worked at Honeywell and Motorola and served as a United States Peace Corps Volunteer in Botswana, Africa. He was a professor at the University of Illiois at Chicago and the University of Minnesota before joining ETH in 2002.

    Prof. Nelson was named to the 2005 "Scientific American 50," Scientific American magazine's annual list recognizing fifty outstanding acts of leadership in science and technology from the past year for his efforts in nanotube manufacturing. His lab won the 2007 and 2009 RoboCup Nanogram Competition--both times the event has been held--in which micrometer size robots competed in soccer. His lab appears in the 2012 Guinness Book of World Records for the "Most Advanced Mini Robot for Medical Use." He serves on the editorial boards of several journals, has chaired several international workshops and conferences, has served as the head of the ETH Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, as the Chairman of the ETH Electron Microscopy Center (EMEZ), and is a member of the Research Council of the Swiss National Science Foundation.

    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)
    ________________________________________________________________________________
    Semi-Classified Inner-Spoiler-Content : Use of Nano-Technologies in current medical-practice I found surprising/astonishing
    (putting this inside this spoiler to keep it away from the eyes of the non-studious and certain types of other people)
    I did not necessarily believe at first that these things (nano-robots) were being put into «vaccines» but, whilst I was re-reviewing some information about the medical-use of nano-technologies, apparently, according to the JustScience.in web-site : «6. Nanotechnology is being incorporated in improving the effectiveness of vaccines.» ...very interesting. Most of you here also probably do not yet know very much about A.I. (Artificial-Intelligence) technology, but the problem-solving capabilities of A.I. are not to be under-estimated, and this was proven when A.I.s had ended up defeating even the world's top grand-masters in rather «complicated» board-games such as Chess and even Go and the A.I.s were even able to continue to do so (win) consistently.
    Crimsọn