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Community Event Hero Giveaway

Discussion in 'Wynncraft' started by NamesAreHard, Dec 7, 2016.

?

did you choose a answer to this poll?

  1. yahya

    113 vote(s)
    83.7%
  2. Nohno

    22 vote(s)
    16.3%
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  1. Kawaii__Turtle

    Kawaii__Turtle Kawaiiest of Turtles CHAMPION

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    Fixed it for ya
     
  2. EZ_TNT

    EZ_TNT Well-Known Adventurer VIP+

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking I WANT HERO!
    Joke, well i have 2.
    1. homework is FUN!
    2. What did the enderdragon have in it's throat? A ENDSTONE!
    other: Idk hero would be AWESOME!
     
  3. iHerp

    iHerp Herb Merchant VIP

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  4. 1ion

    1ion Well-Known Adventurer HERO

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  5. Emeraldruler

    Emeraldruler God of Emeralds | Fire Mage VIP

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking I want hero!
    My attempts at making a good joke.
     
  6. M4x1mum

    M4x1mum Antisocial CHAMPION

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking i want hero
    id like to get it for my alt, his name is leKaito_
    oh yea
    im cold as ice
     
  7. Kraetys

    Kraetys Hater of Catipalism - Certified Nyanarchist HERO

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking I want hero.
    (Jokes)
    -
    Guild Wars
    VIP Plaza
    Jumla's Cage
    Corkus/Bloomi
    -
    Seriously though
    -
    What do you get when you replace all the Hydrogen in a benzene ring with Iron?
    A ferrous wheel!
    -
    What do you do with a sick chemist?
    If you can't Helium, and you can't Curium, then you might as well Barium!
    -
    Two chemists walk into a bar, the first one says, "I'd like a glass of H2O."
    The second one gets confused as to why his friend referred to it as H2O and instead orders a glass of water.
    The first one becomes disappointed because his assassination plan was foiled.
    -
    I'd tell more chemistry jokes, but all the good ones Argon.
    -
     
    Cybersoap707 likes this.
  8. Jbip

    Jbip yea QA GM CHAMPION

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  9. mizzkissy

    mizzkissy De enige echte! HERO

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking i want hero
    Winning this giveaway is a joke
    [​IMG]
    chocolate
     
  10. DaftReaper

    DaftReaper Skilled Adventurer VIP+

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking i want hero :P
    End me
    I've seen you but never took a screenshot of ya.
     
  11. Yuno F Gasai

    Yuno F Gasai Forum God, FW

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking I wanna be a hero!

    where do you find a dog with no legs?
    where you left it
     
  12. Kaelan~

    Kaelan~ RIP VIP

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking I wanna be SUPER MAN (a hero)
    Joke: (down below, and up above)

    Screenshot:
    [​IMG] <--- that was easy to get :P

    Other:
    WAR AND PEACE



    had caught a glimpse of her, she seemed still
    more lovely. She was a charming girl of six-
    teen, evidently passionately in love with him
    (he did not doubt that for an instant). Why
    should he not love her now, and even marry
    her, Rost6v thought, but just now there were
    so many other pleasures and interests before
    him! "Yes, they have taken a wise decision," he
    thought, "I must remain free."

    "Well then, that's excellent," said he. "We'll
    talk it over later on. Oh, how glad I am to have
    you!

    "Well, and are you still true to Boris?" he
    continued.

    "Oh, what nonsense!" cried Natdsha, laugh-
    ing. "I don't think about him or anyone else,
    and I don't want anything of the kind."

    "Dear me I Then what are you up to now?"

    "Now?" repeated Natdsha, and a happy smile
    lit up her face. "Have you seen Duport?"

    "No."

    "Not seen Duport the famous dancer? Well
    then, you won't understand. That's what I'm
    up to."

    Curving her arms, Natdsha held out her
    skirts as dancers do, ran back a few steps,
    turned, cut a caper, brought her little feet
    sharply together, and made some steps on the
    very tips of her toes.

    "See, I'm standing! See!" she said, but could
    not maintain herself on her toes any longer.
    "So that's what I'm up tol I'll never marry any-
    one, but will be a dancer. Only don't tell any-
    one."

    Rost6v laughed so loud and merrily that
    Denisov, in his bedroom, felt envious and Na-
    tdsha could not help joining in.

    "No, but don't you think it's nice?" she kept
    repeating.

    "Nice! And so you no longer wish to marry
    Boris?"

    Natdsha flared up. "I don't want to marry
    anyone. And I'll tell him so when I see him!"

    "Dear me!" said Rost6v.

    "But that's all rubbish," Natdsha chattered
    on. "And is Denfsov nice?" she asked.

    "Yes, indeed!"

    "Oh, well then, good-by: go and dress. Is he
    very terrible, Denisov?"

    "Why terrible?" asked Nicholas. "No, Vdska
    is a splendid fellow."

    "You call him Vdska? That's funny! And is
    he very nice?"

    "Very."

    "Well then, be quick. We'll all have break-
    fast together."



    And Natdsha rose and went out of the room
    on tiptoe, like a ballet dancer, but smiling as
    only happy girls of fifteen can smile. When
    Rost6v met S6nya in the drawing room, he red-
    dened. He did not know how to behave with
    her. The evening before, in the first happy mo-
    ment of meeting, they had kissed each other,
    but today they felt it could not be done; he felt
    that everybody, including his mother and sis-
    ters, was looking inquiringly at him and watch-
    ing to see how he would behave with her. He
    kissed her hand and addressed her not as thou
    but as you Sdnya. But their eyes met and said
    thou, and exchanged tender kisses. Her looks
    asked him to forgive her for having dared, by
    Natdsha's intermediacy, to remind him of his
    promise, and then thanked him for his love.
    His looks thanked her for offering him his free-
    dom and told her that one way or another he
    would never cease to love her, for that would
    be impossible.

    "How strange it is," said Wra, selecting a
    moment when all were silent, "that S6nya and
    Nicholas now say you to one another and meet
    like strangers."

    V^ra's remark was correct, as her remarks al-
    ways were, but, like most of her observations,
    it made everyone feel uncomfortable, not only
    S6nya, Nicholas, .and Natdsha, but even the
    old countess, who dreading this love affair
    which might hinder Nicholas from making a
    brilliant match blushed like a girl.

    Denfsov, to Rost6v's surprise, appeared in
    the drawing room with pomaded hair, per-
    fumed, and in a new uniform, looking just as
    smart as he made himself when going into bat-
    tle, and he was more amiable to the ladies and
    gentlemen than Rost6v had ever expected to
    see him.

    CHAPTER II

    ON HIS RETURN to Moscow from the army,
    Nicholas Rost6v was welcomed by his home cir-
    cle as the best of sons, a hero, and their darling
    Nik61enka; by his relations as a charming, at-
    tractive, and polite youngman; by his acquaint-
    ances as a handsome lieutenant of hussars, a
    good dancer, and one of the best matches in
    the city.

    The Rost6vs knew everybody in Moscow.
    The old count had money enough that year,
    as all his estates had been remortgaged, and so
    Nicholas, acquiring a trotter of his own, very
    stylish riding breeches of the latest cut, such as
    no one else yet had in Moscow, and boots of
    the latest fashion, with extremely pointed toes



    BOOK FOUR



    169



    and small silver spurs, passed his time very
    gaily. After a short period of adapting himself
    to the old conditions of life, Nicholas found it
    very pleasant to be at home again. He felt that
    he had grown up and matured very much. His
    despair at failing in a Scripture examination,
    his borrowing money from Gavrfl to pay a
    sleigh driver, his kissing S6nya on the sly he
    now recalled all this as childishness he had left
    immeasurably behind. Now he was a lieuten-
    ant of hussars, in a jacket laced with silver, and
    wearing the Cross of St. George, awarded to
    soldiers for bravery in action, and in the com-
    pany of well-known, elderly, and respected rac-
    ing men was training a trotter of his own for a
    race. He knew a lady on one of the boulevards
    whom he visited of an evening. He led the
    mazurka at the Arkhdrovs' ball, talked about
    the war with Field Marshal Kdmenski, visited
    the English Club, and was on intimate terms
    with a colonel of forty to whom Denisov had
    introduced him.

    His passion for the Emperor had cooled
    somewhat in Moscow. But still, as he did not
    see him and had no opportunity of seeing him,
    he often spoke about him and about his love
    for him, letting it be understood that he had
    not told all and that there was something in
    his feel ings for the Emperor not everyone could
    understand, and with his whole soul he shared
    the adoration then common in Moscow for the
    Emperor, who was spoken of as the "angel in-
    carnate."

    During Rost6v's short stay in Moscow, before
    rejoining the army, he did not draw closer to
    S6nya, but rather drifted away from her. She
    was very pretty and sweet, and evidently deep-
    ly in love with him, but he was at the period of
    youth when there seems so much to do that
    there is no time for that sort of thing and a
    young man fears to bind himself and prizes
    his freedom which he needs for so many other
    things. When he thought of S6nya, during this
    stay in Moscow, he said to himself, "Ah, there
    will be, and there are, many more such girls
    somewhere whom I do not yet know. There
    will be time enough to think about love when
    I want to, but now I have no time." Besides,
    it seemed to him that the society of women was
    rather derogatory to his manhood. He went to
    balls and into ladies' society with an affectation
    of doing so against his will. The races, the
    English Club, sprees with Denisov, and
    visits to a certain housethat was another
    matter and quite the thing for a dashing
    young hussarl



    At the beginning of March, old Count
    Rost6v was very busy arranging a dinner in
    honorof Prince Bagrati6n at the English Club.

    The count walked up and down the hall in
    his dressing gown, giving orders to the club
    steward and to the famous Feoktfst, the Club's
    head cook, about asparagus, fresh cucumbers,
    strawberries, veal, and fish for this dinner. The
    count had been a member and on the commit-
    tee of the Club from the day it was founded. To
    him the Club entrusted theaVrangement of the
    festival in honor of Bagrati6n, for few men
    knew so well how to arrange a feast on an open-
    handed, hospitable scale, and still fewer men
    would be so well able and willing to make up
    out of their own resources what might be need-
    ed for the success of the fete. The club cook and
    the steward listened to the count's orders with
    pleased faces, for they knew that under no oth-
    er management could they so easily extract a
    good profit for themselves from a dinner cost-
    ing several thousand rubles.

    "Well then, mind and have cocks' combs in
    the turtle soup, you know!"

    "Shall we have three cold dishes then?" asked
    the cook.

    The count considered.

    "We can't have lessyes, three . . . the may-
    onnaise, that's one," said he, bending down a
    finger.

    "Then am I to order those large sterlets?"
    asked the steward.

    "Yes, it can't be helped if they won't take
    less. Ah, dear me! I was forgetting. We must
    have another entree. Ah, goodness gracious!"
    he clutched at his head. "Who is going to get
    me the flowers? Dmftri! Eh, Dmitri 1 Gallop off
    to our Moscow estate," he said to the factotum
    who appeared at his call. "Hurry off and tell
    Maksim, the gardener, to set the serfs to work.
    Say that everything out of the hothouses must
    be brought here well wrapped up in felt. I must
    have two hundred pots here on Friday."

    Having given several more orders, he was
    about to go to his "little countess" to have a
    rest, but remembering something else of im-
    portance, he returned again, called back the
    cook and the club steward, and again began
    giving orders. A light footstep and the clinking
    of spurs were heard at the door, and the young
    count, handsome, rosy, with a dark little mus-
    tache, evidently rested and made sleeker by his
    easy life in Moscow, entered the room.

    "Ah, my boy, my head's in a whirl!" said the
    old man with a smile, as if he felt a little con-
    fused before his son, "Now, if you would only



    170



    WAR AND PEACE



    help a bit! I must have singers too. I shall have
    my own orchestra, but shouldn't we get the
    gypsy singers as well? You military men like
    that sort of thing."

    "Really, Papa, I believe Prince Bagrati6n
    worried himself less before the battle of Schon
    Grabern than you do now," said his son with
    a smile.

    The old count pretended to be angry.

    "Yes, you talk, but try it yourself!"

    And the count turned to the cook, who, with
    a shrewd and respectful expression, looked ob-
    servantly and sympathetically at the father and
    son.

    "What have the young people come to now-
    adays, eh, Feoktist?" said he. "Laughing at us
    old fellows!"

    "That's so, your excellency, all they have to
    do is to eat a good dinner, but providing it and
    serving it all up, that's not their business!"

    "That's it, that's it!" exclaimed the count,
    and gaily seizing his son by both hands, he
    cried, "Now I've got you, so take the sleigh
    and pair at once, and go to Bezukhob's, and
    tell him 'Count Ilyd has sent you to ask for
    strawberries and fresh pineapples.' We can't
    get them from anyone else. He's not there him-
    self, so you'll have to go in and ask the prin-
    cesses; and from there go on to the Rasgulyay
    the coachman Ipdtka knows and look up
    the gypsy Ilyushka, the one who danced at
    Count Orl6v's, you remember, in a white Cos-
    sack coat, and bring him along to me."

    "And am I to bring the gypsy girls along
    with him?" asked Nicholas, laughing. "Dear,
    dear! . . ."

    At that moment, with noiseless footsteps and
    with the businesslike, preoccupied, yet meekly
    Christian look which never left her face, Anna
    MikMylovna entered the hall. Though she
    came upon thecount in his dressing gown every
    day, he invariably became confused and
    begged her to excuse his costume.

    "No matter at all, my dear count," she said,
    meekly closing her eyes. "But I'll go to Bezuk-
    hov's myself. Pierre has arrived, and now we
    shall get anything we want from his hothouses.
    I have to see him in any case. He has forward-
    ed me a letter from Boris. Thank God, Boris
    is now on the staff."

    The count was delighted at Anna Mikhay-
    lovna's taking upon herself one of his com-
    missions and ordered the small closed carriage
    for her.

    "Tell Bezukhov to come. I'll put his name
    down. Is bis wife with him?" he asked.



    Anna Mikhdylovna turned up her eyes, and
    profound sadness was depicted on her face.

    "Ah, my dear friend, he is very unfortunate,"
    she said. "If what we hear is true, it is dreadful.
    How little we dreamed of such a thing when
    we were rejoicing at his happiness! And such
    a lofty angelic soul as young Bezukhovl Yes, I
    pity him from my heart, and shall try to give
    him what consolation I can."

    "Wh-what is the matter?" asked both the
    young and old Rostov.

    Anna Mikhdylovna sighed deeply.

    "D61okhov, Mary Ivdnovna's son," she said
    in a mysterious whisper, "has compromised her
    completely, they say. Pierre took him up, in-
    vited him to his house in Petersburg, and now
    ... she has come here and that daredevil after
    her!" said Anna Mikhylovna, wishing to show
    her sympathy for Pierre, but by involuntary
    intonations and a half smile betraying her
    sympathy for the "daredevil," as she called
    Ddlokhov. "They say Pierre is quite broken by
    his misfortune."

    "Dear, dear! But still tell him to come to the
    Club it will all blow over. It will be a tre-
    mendous banquet."

    Next day, the third of March, soon after one
    o'clock, two hundred and fifty members of the
    English Cluband fifty guests were awaiting the
    guest of honor and hero of the Austrian cam-
    paign, Prince Bagrati6n, to dinner.

    On the first arrival of the news of the battle
    of Austerlitz, Moscow had been bewildered. At
    that time, the Russians were so used to victories
    that on receiving news of the defeat some
    would simply not believe it, while others sought
    some extraordinary explanation of so strange
    an event. In the English Club, where all who
    were distinguished, important, and well in-
    formed forgathered when the news began to
    arrive in December, nothing was said about the
    war and the last battle, as though all were in a
    conspiracy of silence. The men who set the tone
    in conversation Count Rostopchin, Prince
    Yuri Dolgortikov, Valiiev, Count Mdrkov, and
    Prince Vyazemski did not show themselves at
    the Club, but met in private houses in inti-
    mate circles, and the Moscovites who took
    their opinions from others Ilya Rost6v among
    them remained for a while without any defi-
    nite opinion on the subject of the war and
    without leaders. The Moscovites felt that some-
    thing was wrong and that to discuss the bad
    news was difficult, and so it was best to be si-
    lent. But after a while, just as a jury comes out
    of its room, the bigwigs who guided the Club's



    BOOK FOUR



    171



    opinion reappeared, and everybody began
    speaking clearly and definitely. Reasons were
    found for the incredible! unheard-of, and im-
    possible event of a Russian defeat, everything
    became clear, and in all corners of Moscow
    the same things began to be said. These reasons
    were the treachery of the Austrians, a defective
    commissariat, the treachery of the Pole Przeby-
    szwski and of the Frenchman Langeron, Ku-
    tuzov's incapacity, and (it was whispered) the
    youth and inexperience of the sovereign, who
    had trusted worthless and insignificant people.
    But the army, the Russian army, everyone de-
    clared, was extraordinary and had achieved
    miracles of valor. The soldiers, officers, and gen-
    erals were heroes. But the hero of heroes was
    Prince Bagrati6n, distinguished by his Schon
    Grabern affair and by the retreat from Auster-
    litz, where he alone had withdrawn his col-
    umn unbroken and had all day beaten back an
    enemy force twice as numerous as his own.
    What also conduced to Bagrati6n's being se-
    lected as Moscow's hero was the fact that he
    had no connections in the city and was a stran-
    ger there. In his person, honor was shown to a
    simple fighting Russian soldier without con-
    nections and intrigues, and to one who was as-
    sociated by memories of the Italian campaign
    with the name of Suv6rov. Moreover, paying
    such honor to Bagrati6n was the best way of
    expressing disapproval and dislike of Kutiizov.

    "Had there been no Bagrati6n, it would
    have been necessary to invent him," said the
    wit Shinshfn, parodying the words of Voltaire.
    Kutiizov no one spoke of, except some who
    abused him in whispers, calling him a court
    weathercock and an old satyr.

    All Moscow repeated Prince Dolgonikov's
    saying: "If you go on modeling and model-
    ing you must get smeared with clay," suggest-
    ing consolation for our defeat by the memory
    of former victories; and the words of Rostop-
    chfn, that French soldiers have to be incited to
    battle by highfalutin words, and Germans by
    logical arguments to show them that it is more
    dangerous to run away than to advance, but
    that Russian soldiers only need to be restrained
    and held back! On all sides, new and fresh an-
    ecdotes were heard of individual examples of
    heroism shown by our officers and men at Aus-
    terlitz. One had saved a standard, another had
    killed five Frenchmen, a third had loaded five
    cannon singlehanded. Berg was mentioned, by
    those who did not know him, as having, when
    wounded in the right hand, taken his sword in
    the left, and gone forward. Of Bolk6nski, noth-



    ing was said, and only those who knew him in-
    timately regretted that he had died so young,
    leaving a pregnant wife with his eccentric
    father.

    CHAPTER III

    ON THAT third of March, all the rooms in the
    English Club were filled with a hum of conver-
    sation, like the hum of beesswarming in spring-
    time. The members and guests of the Club
    wandered hither and thither, sat, stood, met,
    and separated, some in uniform and some in
    evening dress, and a few here and there with
    powdered hair and in Russian kaftdns. Pow-
    dered footmen, in livery with buckled shoes
    and smart stockings, stood at every door anx-
    iously noting visitors' every movement in order
    to offer their services. Most of those present
    were elderly, respected men with broad, self-
    confident faces, fat fingers, and resolute ges-
    tures and voices. This class of guests and mem-
    bers sat in certain habitual places and met in
    certain habitual groups. A minority of those
    present were casual guests chiefly young men,
    among whom were Denfsov, Rostov, and D6-
    lokhov who was now again an officer in the
    Semenov regiment. The faces of these young
    people, especially those who were militarymen,
    bore that expression of condescending respect
    for their elders which seems to say to the older
    generation, "We are prepared to respect and
    honor you, but all the same remember that the
    future belongs to us."

    Nesvf tski was there as an old member of the
    Club. Pierre, who at his wife's command had
    let his hair grow and abandoned his spectacles,
    went about the rooms fashionably dressed but
    looking sad and dull. Here, as elsewhere, he
    was surrounded by an atmosphere of subser-
    vience to his wealth, and being in the habit of
    lording it over these people, he treated them
    with absent-minded contempt.

    By his age he should have belonged to the
    younger men, but by his wealth and connec-
    tions he belonged to the groups of old and hon-
    ored guests, and so he went from one group to
    another. Some of the most important old men
    were the center of groups which even strangers
    approached respectfully to hear the voices of
    well-known men. The largest circles formed
    round Count Rostopchfn, Valtiev, and Nary-
    shkin. Rostopchfn was describing how the Rus-
    sians had been overwhelmed by flying Austri-
    ans and had had to force their way through
    them with bayonets.

    Valiiev was confidentially telling that Uvdrov



    WAR AND PEACE



    had been sent from Petersburg to ascertain
    what Moscow was thinking about Austerlitz.

    In the third circle, Naryshkin was speaking
    of the meeting of the Austrian Council of War
    at which Suv6rov crowed like a cock in reply to
    the nonsense talked by the Austrian generals.
    Shinshfn, standing close by, tried to make a
    joke, saying that Kutuzov had evidently failed
    to learn from Suv6roveven so simple a thing as
    the art of crowing like a cock, but the elder
    members glanced severely at the wit, making
    him feel that in that place and on that day, it
    was improper to speak so of Kutuzov.

    Count Ilyd Rost6v, hurried and preoccupied,
    went about in his soft boots between the din-
    ing and drawing rooms, hastily greeting the
    important and unimportant, all of whom he
    knew, as if they were all equals, while his eyes
    occasionally sought out his fine well-set-up
    young son, resting on him and winking joyful-
    ly at him. Young Rost6v stood at a window
    with Dolokhov, whose acquaintance he had
    lately made and highly valued. The old count
    came up to them and pressed D61okhov's hand.
     
  13. NamesAreHard

    NamesAreHard Mage Enthusiast (She/He/They) CHAMPION

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    wow 8 pages in about 3 days i think the close date will be around tommarow
     
  14. Locky1110

    Locky1110 Famous Adventurer CHAMPION

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  15. ItzBudder

    ItzBudder What is this for?

    Messages:
    2
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    Hey @Tomato_Viking gimme Hero
    I would make a Chemistry joke but all good ones Argon.
    Sadly haven´t seen you ingame
     
  16. Kraetys

    Kraetys Hater of Catipalism - Certified Nyanarchist HERO

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    Stealing jokes ain't cool man.
     
  17. BlazeX5

    BlazeX5 Well-Known Adventurer VIP+

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  18. Cybersoap707

    Cybersoap707 That one guy VIP+

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    Hey @Tomato_Viking i want hero
    Your Hairline
    I would but you can't see your hairline in it, oh wait, YOU DON't HAVE ONE!!!
    OOOOOOOO

    (jk pls dont hurt me)
     
  19. NamesAreHard

    NamesAreHard Mage Enthusiast (She/He/They) CHAMPION

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    the giveaway open thing is closing in 15 hours and 38 minutes
     
  20. ProptosisLP

    ProptosisLP Ign: ProptosisHDTVLP | Mythic luck VIP+

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    Hi @Tomato_Viking im still asking myself, if you are giving away hero rank or the mythic spear, but I'll take both ;)
     
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