@Patrickwebb The president has sole authority to order a launch. The president always has “the nuclear codes.” You meant “authentication code” and the president ALWAYS has them. He doesn’t need to gain access to them. The military also doesn’t “block” the president. It verifies and launches.
@SecDuffy@FAANews To compare today’s average gamer to ATC duties is irresponsible of you and anyone who endorses it. Today’s lobbies aren’t like 2004 CoD where a kid could handle stress and not be offended by everything. These kids cry. If they aren’t top 100 gamers, don’t even consider ATC.
@Joseph_Avina23@GlitchedDeals You got it! I like niche/woodsy scents from Le Labo (high end. I don’t recommend starting there). Some may find them overpowering or nauseating.
There are a few dupe websites out there that you should try first or go to a fragrance shop in a mall and test some.
@Joseph_Avina23@GlitchedDeals Kind of. This is where it gets fine line technical. So EDP technically refers to Eau de Parfume which means “perfume water”. Parfume (highest levels) itself usually refers to “Extrait de Parfume”. It’s never called EDP. It’s either parfume, extrait, or extrait de parfume.
@Joseph_Avina23@GlitchedDeals TLDR; EDT is bottom of the barrel slightly above your basic cologne with little scent profile. It’s a waste of money and severely overpriced just for a fancy name.
@Joseph_Avina23@GlitchedDeals I’m a fragrance hobbyist so I’m taking this opportunity to let my useless knowledge shine.
Most people think perfume vs cologne = women vs men. The real difference is concentration of fragrance oils basically how strong and long-lasting the scent is.
@Joseph_Avina23@GlitchedDeals EDT is around ~5–15% oil. The rest is just alcohol or water. It’s slightly above your “men’s cologne” concentration which is around ~2-4%. For long lasting scent, go for EDP or Parfume. If you REALLY want to smell it, find extrait levels which are ~35%+.