I still think of work in Japan as endless hours spent at your desk, waiting for your boss to leave so you can leave a bit after, with little recognition and complete loyalty (or at least feigned loyalty) to your bosses and the company as a whole. Is it still the case today?
In the winter, an rtx 3090 is a warm companion as you play endlessly during the long nights.
In the summer, it's a losing hand at a game of strip poker.
I know your pain, I've skipped it entirely and always go for the part number. There are great resources for BMWs with sites like realoem.com, but what about other manufacturers?
Ce processus a dû être inventé par un grand cabinet de conseil et enseigné en école de commerce, car il est présent dans beaucoup de boîtes.
Je crois qu'il s'appelle Méthode Ostrich™.
Well yes and no, in the sense that a landlord can evict you for reasons other than failure to pay rent (YMMV depending on your country) and in some places where housing is hard to come by, a financed house ensures that you won't be evicted because the landlord wants to make yet another Airbnb out of your apartment.
I found it frustrating by NFS standards (grew up with Underground 2, Most Wanted, etc.).
The story is lame as it is poorly written and has no character development. Races are OK except drag (because there are sprint races thrown in it but you carve corners with your drag-prepped rides). Vehicles, when bought, are tired to one type of race and are upgraded (performance wise) via a system that is basically lootboxy and make no mechanical sense. Be ready to buy a turbo that improves your braking, for instance.
Quite frankly, for a modern NFS arcade experience, you're better off with Heat.
I still think of work in Japan as endless hours spent at your desk, waiting for your boss to leave so you can leave a bit after, with little recognition and complete loyalty (or at least feigned loyalty) to your bosses and the company as a whole. Is it still the case today?