Honestly that game was ass, easy and unfun combat if you could time your dodges and the story was predictable. Only the end was interesting and I liked Ardyn s a character.
I once lost my car keys for like 2 weeks and had to use the replacement keys, dumb stick without a remote. The keys were inside a hiking backpack I stowed away in the basement. No idea when or why I put them there.
My steps are usually this:
Blame everyone else, someone MUST have stolen or maliciously misplaced your items.
Tear whole apartment apart (hence the name). Of course you cannot find it.
Grieve and move on. The thing you yearn for is irrecoverably lost.
Yeah and judging by the modlog, pretty arbitrary. I was expecting transphobia or similar, but the banned people were just annoyed by OPs "smugness" and then ban reasons are "you're not the victim" or "playing victim when told he has to earn allyship"??? These are not real reasons no? Im not suggesting a power trip but are you OPs aunt in need of defending them or what.
Back when they started, they had a forum where people explained grammar etc which was very helpful. They closed the forum, gods know why.
Duolingo sucks so much, I won't even recommend the paid version. It teaches you nothing, just trial and error over and over. You can probably watch YouTube in French for a year and will pick up the language faster than trying to do it with Duo.
I went with Innovative Languages, in my case chineseclass101.com (they have one domain for each language, instead of the usual "courses" but it doesn't matter, except if you want to learn multiple languages at once, then you'd pay double)
But just look up comparisons between different providers, maybe try their free or cancelable trials. The most important thing is, I think, having lots of somewhat "natural" dialoge with increasingly more and difficult vocabulary and you NEED those lessons where someone explains why words or grammar is used in a certain way, which Duolingo completely lacks. Sure, you can get it right by context and a lot of repetitions but this will take many more times than "immersing" yourself WITH some sort of guidance.
If you got the basics down and are at an A2-ish level, I would start watching and listening to a lot in your target language (Netflix, bilibili, podcasts), at this point you don't really need more grammar lessons, just some refreshers, which you get from context, and soaking up vocabulary.
"I HAVE COME UP WITH A NEW RECIPE"
Honestly that game was ass, easy and unfun combat if you could time your dodges and the story was predictable. Only the end was interesting and I liked Ardyn s a character.