video game collection

My wish list went missing

at full esrp, 1000 games cost 6000 usd

thats not too many games for a big price, so im not necessarily saving up for that, but rather getting robbed

but it has nothing to do with the fact that im willing to continue paying esrp for my games, i have about 150 games between consoles at most and thats around 9000 usd worth of games when they were all full retail price

Overwatch

I’ve owned Overwatch for at least a week or two and have yet to play it for a few consecutive hours. I played COD: MW for many consecutive days and have grown my PS4 collection to 2 consoles and slightly over 100 owned games, and I have PSNOW and PS Plus. So Overwatch is one of the 100 or so games I haven’t played as much as COD and GTA 5. I’m going to have to blog a little bit to see if this gaming platform will work for me.

Occultism is very real and shit just isn’t letting me play my fucking games and keep shopping. I fucking hate poverty, gold diggers, men and women.

Cheers MASS!

Honestly, I am not saving money.

I would never think that I have to make public disclosures about my life so much, and I hope there’s enough stimulus and sympathy for everyone financially in this once great country. Everything has been bad for as long as humans have failed to create. Penmanship can help us succeed in many ways, and technology has made us out and up for a century now. I have no intentions to stop shopping, and every time I feel defeated after a small shopping expenditure, I just wish I could make it a bigger one. If you get what I am saying, we are helpless. I want to dedicate myself to human right activism less, and get to shopping. I feel like shopping and eating is what people really enjoy, and millionaires and billionaires are always in the way. Whether or not my connotations are deep: I feel deeply targeted. Slavery is NOT abolished and I will defeat you all. Haha, seriously: people have NO chill right now. I can’t even spend 100,000 dollars without starving myself or being required to save a percentage of my income or net worth even a little TOO much in order to shop again. Is it really worth it to spend every last dollar on myself to prove a point? NO. Of course not: and of course I’ve done it well over a dozen or a million times and have no intention of making every $100,000 a connotation for myself to dazzle at, as if something will always be missing in my life. The truth MUST prevail.

Writing should be something I can USE, but the more I write the more I realize, I am JUST BRAINDUMPING.

Cheers Massachusetts.

Locked up

Literally, we live in a generation where ALL people care about is themselves. Marriages destroy and deter men from their families, and many men are getting thrown into the streets homeless, jails and prisons by VAGRANT Americans with $2,000 in net worth who would rather save petty money and torture others than step up to the plate and SHOW people they CAN, WILL and DO walk on water.

I can’t write a million words, so I challenge others to do so. Time and other mental health related constraints just won’t let me write a million words, so winning this settlement will be the jargon of a lifetime: especially when it comes time to show you that just because you have a million dollars doesn’t mean you can sell words by the dollar. A million dollars is easily spent here and will never be enough.

Punch Drunk

I want to write through my punch drunken rage and come to a conclusion about so many things: and reach my writing goals to show WordPress and YouTube, Instagram and Twitter & Facebook and Snapchat what it’s all come to. 1,000,000 words a year is probably impressionable and that’s unprofitable in my book: writing about nothing. I am punch drunk.

Introduce Yourself (Example Post)

This is an example post, originally published as part of Blogging University. Enroll in one of our ten programs, and start your blog right.

You’re going to publish a post today. Don’t worry about how your blog looks. Don’t worry if you haven’t given it a name yet, or you’re feeling overwhelmed. Just click the “New Post” button, and tell us why you’re here.

Why do this?

  • Because it gives new readers context. What are you about? Why should they read your blog?
  • Because it will help you focus you own ideas about your blog and what you’d like to do with it.

The post can be short or long, a personal intro to your life or a bloggy mission statement, a manifesto for the future or a simple outline of your the types of things you hope to publish.

To help you get started, here are a few questions:

  • Why are you blogging publicly, rather than keeping a personal journal?
  • What topics do you think you’ll write about?
  • Who would you love to connect with via your blog?
  • If you blog successfully throughout the next year, what would you hope to have accomplished?

You’re not locked into any of this; one of the wonderful things about blogs is how they constantly evolve as we learn, grow, and interact with one another — but it’s good to know where and why you started, and articulating your goals may just give you a few other post ideas.

Can’t think how to get started? Just write the first thing that pops into your head. Anne Lamott, author of a book on writing we love, says that you need to give yourself permission to write a “crappy first draft”. Anne makes a great point — just start writing, and worry about editing it later.

When you’re ready to publish, give your post three to five tags that describe your blog’s focus — writing, photography, fiction, parenting, food, cars, movies, sports, whatever. These tags will help others who care about your topics find you in the Reader. Make sure one of the tags is “zerotohero,” so other new bloggers can find you, too.

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