D&D 5th edition will live on in Project Black Flag, and The Vineyard leads the way
Inside Kobold Press’ effort to keep the most popular edition of Dungeons & Dragons alive
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Inside Kobold Press’ effort to keep the most popular edition of Dungeons & Dragons alive
A SOUTHERN woman has shut down the haters who disapprove of her outdoorsy lifestyle.
She likes drinking beer and shooting a bow and arrow, even if others don’t think that’s what she’s “supposed” to be doing.
A woman said she gets criticized for her drinking habits and is told to act like a lady[/caption]
A self-proclaimed Georgia peach now living in North Carolina, Abigail Miller (@abigail_miller919) spends most of her time outside in the fresh air.
Between her career in construction and her penchant for hunting, the 25-year-old country girl doesn’t necessarily fit the stereotypical female mold – and she’s proud of that.
In one video, she said she has another hobby that men often criticize: how much she likes to drink.
Posing in fitted jeans and a low-cut shirt that flaunted her cleavage , she revealed what the haters tell her: “Stop drinking like a grown man and start acting more ladylike.”
Singing along to the country tune in the background, she mouthed the words: “I don’t need the laws of man to tell me what I ought to do.”
To brush off the criticism further, she captioned the clip with a beer emoji and the words: “You call it a red flag… I call it having a good time!”
Abigail’s alcohol consumption, however, isn’t the only thing men call her out for.
In another video, she revealed how men react to her love of hunting.
Besides being told that she doesn’t “look like [she] hunts,” men also find fault in her form with a bow and arrow, saying, “You’re doing it wrong.”
She’s also been told, “Women don’t belong in the woods,” and that she intimidates the guys around her.
Luckily, viewers in the comments had her back.
“Whoever the hell said that is an idiot. Everyone belongs in the woods!” wrote one.
Another follower said: “Those are the words of the insecure for sure lol…Keep doing your thing.”
“She is a keeper,” commented a third person.
Abigail is proud of her skills and said that she isn’t going to listen to what men believe she should and shouldn’t do[/caption]
The road of the Russian Embassy in London was painted with the colors of the Ukrainian flag on Thursday. Marking the eve of the one-year anniversary since Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine, Led By Donkeys, originally an anti-Brexit art and activist group, poured hundreds of liters of blue and yellow paint on Bayswater Road to remind Russian president Vladimir Putin that Ukraine is “‘an independent state and a people with every right to self-determination.” Since then, a section of Bayswater Road has been renamed to Kyiv Road.
Feb. 24 marks a year since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has displaced over 13 million people and caused over 18,000 civilian casualties.
WHEN it comes to online dating, there are a number of unspoken rules.
TikTok user Michelle Meleskie recounted the experience she had with a dating app player.
In her video, Michelle explained how she goes about saving the contact information of men she’s met on dating apps.
“Whenever I save someone’s number in my phone from a dating app, I always call them ‘First Name Hinge, ‘First Name Bumble,’ and I thought this was standard practice,” she said.
However, Michelle soon learned that wasn’t the case for everyone after she met a man at her local bar.
She told her followers that she and her friends were helping the man take a picture on his phone when she spotted an interesting notification.
Michelle detailed: “A notification popped through from ‘Hinge Girl #7.’ No first name, just ‘Hinge Girl #7.’”
While the influencer didn’t inquire any further with the obvious player, she posed the question to her viewers.
“HOW DO YOU KEEP TRACK OF WHO THEY ARE?!?” she asked in the clip’s caption.
She added: “And also I’m wondering, at what point do you switch them from ‘Hinge Girl #7’ to their first name?”
Michelle’s followers took to the comments section to share their thoughts.
“That’s a red flag,” wrote one TikTok user.
Another viewer said: “If I found out a guy called me ‘Hinge girl 7’ in his phone I would probably stop talking to him. I am a person. not a number.”
“I don’t save any numbers until they prove they’re worthy lol,” commented a third person.