My game, Last Night in Lagos, is OUT NOW!
In a scene that thrives on status and packaging, how far are you willing to go to get to the top?
Weave through a night out in Lagos and find out if you have what it takes to blow.
Play now for free:
🔗https://t.co/RDQ0StBff4
Please RT!!
I don’t think it’s desperation or poverty alone. I’m pretty confident that even people who did not really need the money would have collected it. It is a cultural weakness for money. Nigerian culture is simply defenceless against money. The presence of money in any situation alters behaviour and tips the scale
Nothing concern these ones with forensic evidence. Is the house being demolished out of spite or is this like when they publicly burn down seized drugs? Wuz going awnnn
Nigerian celebrities dine, party, feast and pop pills with politicians, but when tragedy strikes, they open the camera and start crying on social media, asking us to call on the government.
You have their numbers! Call them yourself.
I feel that young people's leaning in prudishness is connected with the collective fear of making mistakes and turning into the next topic of discussion that everyone can morally grandstand on tbh. you have to just live your life.
My game, Last Night in Lagos, is OUT NOW!
In a scene that thrives on status and packaging, how far are you willing to go to get to the top?
Weave through a night out in Lagos and find out if you have what it takes to blow.
Play now for free:
🔗https://t.co/RDQ0StBff4
Please RT!!
New look at the Esiri brothers’ Clarissa ahead of its Directors’ Fortnight premiere at Cannes.
(via Indiewire)
More Nigerian presence at Cannes. https://t.co/ePIbLWkKLb