n64controller
Fernando   Miami, Florida, United States
 
 
:lunar2019piginablanket:

who's the little smimii
Currently Offline
Favorite Game
bona fide 9 Oct, 2024 @ 12:41pm 
hey |hii} i was stalking urr profile these past days and couldnt help but message you 😘 , can you plss msg me on my other acc so my bf doesn't see? 💋
sylex 7 Oct, 2024 @ 8:16pm 
i was born to fight woke.
i was born to listen to phonk.
i was born to idolise andrew tate.
i was born to watch youtube shorts.
i am not ‘woke’
and i will never be ‘woke’
sylex 6 Oct, 2024 @ 6:50pm 
get rid of hackers. flight without jetpacks, shooting through walls without the shooting through walls thing, and fix the report system. ive played this game since 2019, still one of my favorites. its just so easy to hack.
yen 20 Sep, 2024 @ 5:26pm 
Although yen suggests no more than a strong desire these days (as in "a yen for a beach vacation"), at one time someone with a yen was in deep trouble: the first meaning of yen was an intense craving for opium. The word comes from Cantonese yīn-yáhn, a combination of yīn, meaning "opium," and yáhn, "craving." In English, the Chinese syllables were translated as yen-yen.
умн ябез 18 Sep, 2024 @ 10:26am 
we got the same pfp lol
Paul walker 15 Sep, 2024 @ 5:20am 
I've been noticing an unusual trend in the quality of Snickers bars over the last decade. I found an old one from 5 years ago and decided to study its composition under my spectrometer and discovered something unnerving. The Snickers bar currently sold in stores contains 43.67% less rare earth elements by weight, when compared to one sold 5 years ago. Do they think they can fool us? It's hard to wrap my mind around why they would do this. Thorium used to make up 12% of the bar, but now it's at 8%, and now there's only 4% Americium compared to 7% just a while ago. It's all been replaced by organic carbon-based matter, like sucrose and poorly crafted carbohydrates. I'm disappointed in the Mars corporation, and I hope my findings will gain enough publicity to force Mars into reverting back to the old formula. Consider this an open letter.