Everything posted by XZoro
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DH1 DH2 Listen the songs completely before you voting .
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Nickname : @XZoro™ Tag your opponent : @-Apex Music genre : Arabic rap Number of votes ( max 7 ) : 7 Tag one leader to post your songs LIST : Me.
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DH1 DH2
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Accepted DH1 DH2
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Hello my friend as i see , your last request for moderator get rejected cuz you are not active in our forum , and when i saw this request i expected you have good activity and corrected your mistake in this request but i dont see any activity , so first you have to make activity and join in our projects + be active in ts3 and in section F.A.Q Problems ts3 , then come back with new request Good luck.
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i'll vote for DH1 better than DH2 with nice sound + calm rhythm.
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i'll vote for DH2 eminem good song .
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My vote goes to DH1 , Great song .
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i'll vote for DH2 better than DH1 , amazing song .
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Accepted DH1 DH2
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Welcome To The Family ❤️ .
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Welcome Have fun, enjoy.
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The Prince of Wales will urge nations to stand up against intolerance and strive for a "better tomorrow" during a remembrance ceremony in Germany. As post-Brexit trade talks continue, Prince Charles will also call on the UK and Germany to "reaffirm" their bond in a "new chapter in our long history". His wife, Camilla, has joined him on their first official overseas visit since the start of the Covid pandemic. They attended a wreath-laying ceremony at memorial in Berlin. During his speech to the Bundestag, the German parliament, later on Sunday afternoon the prince will say the global crises of the pandemic and climate change "demand" that the the UK and Germany "act together". Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall were welcomed by President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and his wife Elke Budenbender on the steps of the Bellevue Palace in Berlin. The four then travelled to the Neue Wache Central Memorial, dedicated to victims of war and tyranny, where a wreath had been laid on behalf of the prince in front of a sculpture titled Mother With Her Dead Son. Prince Charles briefly touched the wreath before joining the president and four other German dignitaries in a silence as a trumpet solo echoed through the building. The message on the prince's poppy wreath read: "In everlasting remembrance of all victims of conflict and tyranny. Charles." Camilla then laid a posy featuring rosemary for remembrance and olive, white daisies and nerines for peace. A statement from Clarence House before the visit said: "The event pays tribute to the Allied commitment to the liberation from Nazi occupation and to the reconstruction, re-democratisation and subsequent reunification of Germany." 'Interests entwined' Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall are the first members of the Royal Family to attend the ceremony at the German parliament in Berlin, marking the country's National Day of Mourning for victims of war. They flew to Berlin Brandenburg Airport on Saturday evening in the UK's ministerial RAF Voyager jet - the first time it has flown dignitaries since a makeover costing almost £1m. The prince, who celebrated his 72nd birthday on Saturday, was presented with a birthday cake during the flight. The speech comes 75 years after the end of World War Two and will highlight the friendship between the UK and Germany. And it comes as post-Brexit trade talks are reaching their crucial final stages. The prince is expected to say: "We must be resolute in addressing acts of unspeakable cruelty against people for reasons of their religion, their race or their beliefs, wherever they occur in the world. "We must stand alongside each other in determined defence of the future we owe our children and our grandchildren." He will add: "We are heavily invested in each other's futures, such that our national interests, whilst distinct, will always be entwined... "Let us reflect on all that we have been through together, and all that we have learned. Let us remember all victims of war, tyranny and persecution; those who laid down their lives for the freedoms we cherish, and those who struggle for these freedoms to this day." The Royal Family have carried out a number of European visits since the UK voted to leave the EU in 2016. During a tour of Germany in May last year, Prince Charles said the bonds between the UK and Germany "will, and must endure" post-Brexit. And when his son, the Duke of Cambridge, visited the country in 2016, William said the depth of Britain's friendship with Germany would not change after the UK left the EU. Ahead of his trip, the Prince Charles held a telephone meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
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Game Informations. Developers : LKA. Released : February 16, 2016. Genre : Adventure , horror . Mode : Single-player. Platforms : Microsoft Windows - PlayStation 4 - Xbox One - Nintendo Switch. It is perfectly clear, right from the pre-game warning screen, that this is a game that won’t be pulling any punches. The Town of Light tells the tragic tale of a teenage girl, Renée, suffering mental illness inside the walls of an early twentieth century Italian asylum, and while the characters are fictional, everything else is based on true events. An abandoned, decrepit mental hospital would make an ideal setting for a traditional horror game, but the fact that this title is based on a real location instantly ratchets up the atmosphere. The Town of Light is essentially a walking simulator in which you play as an older Renée revisiting Volterra in order to piece together the fragmented memories of her time as one of its patients. Most of the story is told through narration that gently guides your hand through the decaying hallways and wards, although you are allowed to explore to an extent. Doing so provides a little more context to the setting with a smattering of interactive items you can examine, such as old documentation describing a patient’s belongings at admission, or strange coins - the hospital’s very own currency. Scoping out each and every room within the building isn’t necessary, but really helps to flesh out the asylum and its dark history. There are also eight diary pages to collect as you play, usually slightly out of the way, and finding them pieces together some of Renée’s backstory. It’s clear that the developer wants you to soak in as much of the asylum as you can, and you should. From the bizarre graffiti that adorns the peeling walls to the bloodstained wireframe beds, the setting is a unique and powerful presence that is both deeply haunting and fascinating. Graphically it’s not the cleanest, and some lengthy loading times detract from the experience somewhat, but it’s hard not to be engrossed by the recreated hallways of a real derelict hospital. Of course, it’s through the main story that you’ll learn of Volterra’s darkest aspects. It should come as no surprise to learn that conditions during its operation were horrific; knowledge of mental illnesses in the early 1900s was rudimentary, nurses were overworked and cruel, and patients were living in overcrowded wards. Inhumane practices and awful mistreatment ensured the closure of Volterra in 1978, but until then, thousands of poor souls bore the brunt of it all. Renée’s narration makes up the majority of the storytelling, and it is sometimes accompanied by hand-drawn cut scenes that help to illustrate things as they were. Occasionally, you’ll also act as her inner self, selecting from a couple of options to help her piece together her story at certain moments. There are no alternative endings, but the three-hour story can divert during some chapters, encouraging multiple playthroughs if you want to see every narrative thread. Unfortunately, the story becomes confusing as it goes on, thanks to some wonky writing. The narration speaks about Renée as if she’s a totally different person, and while it seems like the story is purposefully abstract in places, it can be difficult to keep tabs on what’s real, or what actually happened. It’s a shame that the story strays into baffling territory, not helped by some surreal sequences that feel slightly out of place, as it does contain some truly harrowing and hard-to-watch moments. As we’ve said, it may be that the story was intended to be somewhat obscure and open to interpretation, but we feel that the writing could’ve done with another pass over to ensure that players are intrigued by the narrative rather than flummoxed by it. That said, The Town of Light comes as close as games dare to successfully tackling mature, delicate subject matter head on, and that its foundations are built on real events means it really drives its message home. System Requirements. MINIMUM: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS : Windows 7/8/10 64bit Processor : Intel Core i3 or equivalent AMD Memory : 4 GB RAM Graphics : NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460, AMD Radeon HD 6770 with at least 1 GB VRAM DirectX : Version 11 Storage : 8 GB available space Sound Card : DirectX Compatible Additional Notes : Supported Controllers: Xbox 360 or Xbox One compatible. --------------------- RECOMMENDED: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS : Windows 7/8/10 64bit Processor : Intel Core i5 or equivalent AMD Memory : 8 GB RAM Graphics : NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560, AMD Radeon HD 7790 DirectX : Version 11 Storage : 8 GB available space Sound Card : DirectX Compatible The Town of Light is a powerful experience that highlights a fascinating, if chilling, chapter in human history. The heavy atmosphere is achieved through the very real setting of Volterra, and Renée’s unfortunate tale of life inside its walls that represents the woes of many real people. The story meanders a little too far into obscurity and can become confusing, and some long load times scupper things further. While you won’t necessarily have fun in the traditional sense, it’s worth playing if you’re at all interested, as it contains some striking sequences that will stay with you long after you finish.
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EU ministers say the bloc needs to adopt a law this year obliging internet firms to remove extremist propaganda within an hour of it being reported. The EU has been discussing such a regulation for more than a year, but the recent terror attacks in France and Austria have given it new urgency. Interior ministers said the text must be agreed soon with the EU Commission and European Parliament. They also urged more EU data-sharing and more systematic border checks. Both German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer and EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson called for an agreement by Christmas on the new "regulation on terrorist content online (TCO)". The ministers' joint statement called for a "rapid and effective instrument to counter terrorist content online within an hour or less of its being reported". The Austrian authorities have found intelligence lapses which allowed the Vienna gunman, identified as a dual Austrian-Macedonian national, to slip under the police radar - yet he had served a jail term for seeking to join jihadists in Syria. The gunman opened fire on 2 November on people relaxing in a po[CENSORED]r central district, killing four, before police shot him dead. The investigation has established that Kujtim Fejzulai, 20, had been released early from jail in December, had tried to buy ammunition in Slovakia in July, and had also met German and Swiss Islamists in Vienna that month. This week Austrian police raided more than 60 addresses allegedly linked to Islamist extremists and seized millions of euros of cash. Dozens of suspects are under investigation. Ms Johansson said another priority must be tighter controls on the EU's external borders, so that terror suspects could be tracked more systematically. Co-ordinating such checks between 27 member states has proven difficult, as most are in the passport-free Schengen zone where border checks are minimal. Ms Johansson said a study by the EU border force Frontex last year found that 22% of those entering the Schengen zone had not been recorded in the digital Schengen Information System. The ministers' statement said the EU's police forces must "do their utmost to prevent foreign terrorist fighters, many of whom have combat experience, from entering the Schengen area undetected". 'Not against religion' The statement also said "our fight against terrorism is not directed against any religious or political beliefs, but against fanatical and violent extremism". It came as France mourned the 130 people killed by jihadists in Paris in November 2015. French investigators have established that Brahim Aouissaoui, the Tunisian who fatally stabbed three people in a church in Nice last month, had only arrived in Europe in September. He was shot and wounded by police and is in hospital in the southern French city. He had reached Nice after first getting to Italy by boat. Investigators say they have found a picture on his phone of the Chechen man who beheaded a teacher near Paris two weeks earlier, AFP news agency reports. They also found pictures linked to the Islamic State group on his phone.
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