A standford study has recently gone viral for showing that a passion for pokemon during childhood actually creates a small section of the brain that is dedicated to responding to pokemon and pokemon only
the pokebrain is real
A Stanford study found that people who played Pokémon heavily as kids developed a small region of the brain that responds specifically to Pokémon characters.
Researchers scanned adults who grew up playing on Game Boy and showed them images of Pokémon like Pikachu and Bulbasaur.
Their brains lit up in the same exact spot, a consistent area in the visual cortex tied to recognizing specific categories of objects.
The reason comes down to childhood. When you’re young, your brain is more flexible, and spending hours memorizing hundreds of similar-looking Pokémon essentially trained it to carve out space just for them.
(via @Stanford)
the average American cannot afford their mortgage, reflecting a serious issue in this country in terms of affordability and the housing market with the search term "Help with mortgage" seeing new all time high's in the US
https://t.co/iISaaoNsgx
how me and the homegoys pull up to the 25 year high school reunion knowing we're the only stone cold kissless trucel brontochud virgins left in the original friend group
@DipWheeler Hearing that the chud lab is working on a revolutionary new anti-foid formula that converts all the HTNs and foids into androgenic bronchochuds with optimal mog levels hitting peak retard aura which will open the eyes of billions to the simple fact that nothing ever happens