@B1gDaddyMarv The AI is way too aggressive on all but the easiest mode. The amount of times I've just been rammed off the road. If I wanted that shit I'd just play online.
@HenryJackson87 He will be gone by Christmas, with a wasted pre-season, transfer window, and 6 months of the season.
Anyone who can't see it coming is living in denial.
The issue isn't about impeding the goalie. The issue is every team in the league have had their goalies impeded by Arsenal players this season, and nothing was done about it. They allowed those grapples, pushes, shoves and thereby set a precedent on how corners and set pieces were to be officiated this season. Chalking a goal off for impeding the GK, after setting a precedent to the contrary, on the most important game of the run-in and thereby deciding the title and relegation is why people are angry.
@TheImmortalKop It's crazy that we are going to stick with him and waste a transfer window, pre-season, and 5 months of next season just to sack him at Christmas.
Despite a decade of Mohamed Salah being wrestled, pushed, elbowed, tackled, and hardly winning a penalty, he is still the most polite and classy player we have ever seen.
Arne Slot and LFC are benching Salah for Frimpong.
Salah has the most big chances created in the Champions League this year. The club’s agenda against Mo after all he’s done for them is disgraceful.
These are the type of people I want to hear from when talking about the Egyptian King... not Jamie O fucking Hara and a bunch of social media influencers.
I’ve noticed a pattern; when a decent game comes out that expects you to be curious, to be observant and to pay attention, a lot of tourists-turned-reviewers are the first to rage quit, refund, or low-grade that game.
Some games aren’t for everyone, but I’m starting to think the pattern is made pretty clear by those who say they don’t like yellow paint, but absolutely need it.
Europe's oldest human footprints were found at Happisburgh, Norfolk, in 2013. 🇬🇧
850,000 years old. The oldest outside Africa.
They belonged to a group of early humans, Homo antecessor, moving through an ancient river estuary. Adults and children. The prints showed they were walking south, possibly following game or seasonal food sources.
At the time, Britain was not an island. A vast low-lying plain called Doggerland connected it to continental Europe. The river they walked beside was an early version of the Thames, flowing northeast into what is now the North Sea.
The prints were buried under hundreds of thousands of years of sediment. Coastal erosion at Happisburgh, one of the fastest eroding coastlines in Europe, stripped the overlying layers back and exposed them.
Researchers from the British Museum and Natural History Museum had days to work before the tides returned. They used photogrammetry to create a permanent 3D record of every print.
The sea took them within two weeks.
The photogrammetric record survived. The prints did not.
Happisburgh has since yielded the oldest known stone tools in northern Europe, pushing back the date of human habitation in Britain further than previously thought.
Nearly a million years of human presence on this land. And that's just what we have evidence for.
If you didn't know that, that's what we do. Help us teach others. 🙏🇬🇧
https://t.co/rih7iKwVkN
Be part of us.
Be Proud Of Us 🙏🇬🇧