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Viajero

Volunteer Moderator
Wow, page 7 of the thread and it hasn't been mentioned yet, so I will....

IS THE GAME NOT DOOOOOOMMMMMEEEEDDDD??

PS thanks for the update, we wait with baited breath!

I am sorry to report Elite was declared doomed in 2012 already. And every year after that too. Any time now.
 
You horrors! Oh the temptation!

*Thinking about chippy tea*

gotta love the internets ...

[FONT=q_serif]In the UK, chips - or fries, if you’re American - are a very popular meal. A chippy is the shop that makes the fries. They do other things, such as fried cod (fried in batter) and other things too, fried in batter). If you go ‘down the chippy’, you go to the shop that makes these very British meals. This could also include steak pudding, with chips, sausages with chips. The term ‘I’m going down the chippy’ means ‘I’m going to the shop where they make chips and other battered and fried dishes’. Chips were the mainstay of lower class to lower middle class people. Fish’n chips is still a reverred tradition in the UK. I would say that the most popular of that range is ‘fish, chips ’n mushy peas.’ The term ‘tea’ doesn’t refer only a cup of tea. Tea was and still the mealtime drink. Cheap and warming. The drink of the workers, when, after the meal called ‘tea’, which, by the way was served at about at round about 6.pm, the men would head off ‘down the Pub’ - the place which was a drinking house for workers. I remember that they used to scatter sawdust to drink up the spillage. The men would meet there, and drink themselves ‘bladdered’, then stagger their way home under the influence of alcohol! These were small, popular places where men had a sort of private place, the elite of their kind.[/FONT]
[FONT=q_serif]With the increase of better and more secure jobs, and the ease of access to supermarkets, as well of job opportunities, the pub (meaning ‘Public House’ i.e. open to all), and the ease with which women now have in the job markets, society has now come together much better. However, the ‘chippy tea’ is still a beloved pre-evening meal, the tradtion of which still lies whithin our blood.[/FONT]
[FONT=q_serif]I hope this explains ‘chippy tea’ for you
(https://www.quora.com/What-is-chippy-tea)[/FONT]
 
Wait... is time-travel in the next release? Is that what you're saying? Explorers can find wormholes which transport us back to the past, so next month we can post here 'later today'?

It's so obvious, I'm almost embarrassed I missed it...
 
You horrors! Oh the temptation!

*Thinking about chippy tea*

gotta love the internets ...

[FONT=q_serif]In the UK, chips - or fries, if you’re American - are a very popular meal. A chippy is the shop that makes the fries. They do other things, such as fried cod (fried in batter) and other things too, fried in batter). If you go ‘down the chippy’, you go to the shop that makes these very British meals. This could also include steak pudding, with chips, sausages with chips. The term ‘I’m going down the chippy’ means ‘I’m going to the shop where they make chips and other battered and fried dishes’. Chips were the mainstay of lower class to lower middle class people. Fish’n chips is still a reverred tradition in the UK. I would say that the most popular of that range is ‘fish, chips ’n mushy peas.’ The term ‘tea’ doesn’t refer only a cup of tea. Tea was and still the mealtime drink. Cheap and warming. The drink of the workers, when, after the meal called ‘tea’, which, by the way was served at about at round about 6.pm, the men would head off ‘down the Pub’ - the place which was a drinking house for workers. I remember that they used to scatter sawdust to drink up the spillage. The men would meet there, and drink themselves ‘bladdered’, then stagger their way home under the influence of alcohol! These were small, popular places where men had a sort of private place, the elite of their kind.[/FONT]
[FONT=q_serif]With the increase of better and more secure jobs, and the ease of access to supermarkets, as well of job opportunities, the pub (meaning ‘Public House’ i.e. open to all), and the ease with which women now have in the job markets, society has now come together much better. However, the ‘chippy tea’ is still a beloved pre-evening meal, the tradtion of which still lies whithin our blood.[/FONT]
[FONT=q_serif]I hope this explains ‘chippy tea’ for you
(https://www.quora.com/What-is-chippy-tea)[/FONT]
 
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