The Altera Centauri collection has been brought up to date by Darsnan. It comprises every decent scenario he's been able to find anywhere on the web, going back over 20 years.
25 themes/skins/styles are now available to members. Check the select drop-down at the bottom-left of each page.
Call To Power 2 Cradle 3+ mod in progress: https://apolyton.net/forum/other-games/call-to-power-2/ctp2-creation/9437883-making-cradle-3-fully-compatible-with-the-apolyton-edition
Jon Miller: MikeH speaks the truth
Jon Miller: MikeH is a shockingly revolting dolt and a masturbatory urine-reeking sideshow freak whose word is as valuable as an aging cow paddy. We've got both kinds
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb !
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
Originally posted by Provost Harrison
Well molly, your view is going to get a whole lot worse if this prediction of what Docklands will look like in 2008 is anything to go by
I don't consider it to be a bad building by any means. I like the curvilinear balconies, for instance, infinitely preferable to the monotonous oblong planters we see all too frequently.
I prefer brick built though- probably from spending so much time in Manchester and less well off parts of London- there's a lot to be said for the humanizing aspects of brick construction.
Vive la liberte. Noor Inayat Khan, Dachau.
...patriotism is not enough. I must have no hatred or bitterness towards anyone. Edith Cavell, 1915
I don't consider it to be a bad building by any means. I like the curvilinear balconies, for instance, infinitely preferable to the monotonous oblong planters we see all too frequently.
I prefer brick built though- probably from spending so much time in Manchester and less well off parts of London- there's a lot to be said for the humanizing aspects of brick construction.
Depends on your perspective and houses you've seen. This one is just too ... Khrushchevian for my taste.
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb !
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
Depends on your perspective and houses you've seen. This one is just too ... Khrushchevian for my taste.
It's better built and designed- I think you're being a bit harsh on the architect.
We do have a tower block a short walk from where I live that was used in an old ad campaign for the Face, I think, or Levi's- about a trendy young Russian smuggling goods in to Russia from his trip abroad.
The tower block fitted in very nicely with the 'Russian' Cold War landscape. Thankfully it has been renovated and its bleakness ameliorated somewhat.
It's better built and designed- I think you're being a bit harsh on the architect.
Oh I believe that, and it DOES look better than those blocks where I grew up in until I was 4, but that was my first impression.
Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb !
Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.
Oh I believe that, and it DOES look better than those blocks where I grew up in until I was 4, but that was my first impression.
When I was a student, I lived in some grim blocks in Manchester on the Hulme Estate.
Nico lived there for a time too, when she was well into her heroin fuelled decline, so you can imagine just how ritzy it was.
The big idea when they were built was 'building' communities (rather than letting them develop) by demolishing brick 'slum' houses and replacing them with shoddy concrete and asbestos blocks with interconnecting walkways.
They were grey, which always went well with Manchester's prevailing weather. The heating systems were interconnected, which meant if one flat had cockroaches, all in a block tended to get them- oh, and mice too.
The walkways made excellent tracks for muggers on bikes too- or deliverers of drugs.
Originally posted by Provost Harrison
Well molly, your view is going to get a whole lot worse if this prediction of what Docklands will look like in 2008 is anything to go by
Didn't quite work out.
Anyway, reason for bump, the Shard is coming along nicely. That is to say work is being done.
Moscow isn't a big village built around a cluster**** of skyscrapers (we have a damn castle smack in the middle of the city and the same problems with teh ground as Paris), so the skyline is quite different.
Graffiti in a public toilet
Do not require skill or wit
Among the **** we all are poets
Among the poets we are ****.
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