เกมจากผู้จัดจำหน่าย Spike Chunsoft กำลังลดราคาสูงสุด 90% ในเว็บ Steam เหลือราคาดังนี้
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KATANA KAMI: A Way of the Samurai Story ลด 50% เหลือ 189.50 บาท
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STEINS;GATE ลด 60% เหลือ 151.60 บาท
STEINS;GATE 0 ลด 60% เหลือ 167.60 บาท
STEINS;GATE: My Darling's Embrace ลด 50% เหลือ 189.50 บาท
STEINS;GATE SERIES BUNDLE ลด 64% เหลือ 538.92 บาท
STEINS;GATE + STEINS;GATE 0 ลด 64% เหลือ 287.28 บาท
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Conception PLUS: Maidens of the Twelve Stars ลด 60% เหลือ 596 บาท
Conception II: Children of the Seven Stars ลด 70% เหลือ 110.70 บาท
Conception: Bundle of Joy ลด 66% เหลือ 636.03 บาท
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YU-NO: A girl who chants love at the bound of this world ลด 50% เหลือ 289.50 บาท
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AI: The Somnium Files ลด 60% เหลือ 676 บาท
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Zero Escape: The Nonary Games ลด 66% เหลือ 128.86 บาท
Zero Escape: Zero Time Dilemma ลด 66% เหลือ 98.26 บาท
Zero Escape Trilogy ลด 73% เหลือ 181.70 บาท
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Team Zero Escape Bundle ลด 66% เหลือ 812.80 บาท
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Crystar ลด 66% เหลือ 237.66 บาท
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Zanki Zero: Last Beginning ลด 80% เหลือ 358 บาท
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CHAOS;CHILD ลด 60% เหลือ 167.60 บาท
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428: Shibuya Scramble ลด 80% เหลือ 115.80 บาท
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Mystery Chronicle: One Way Heroics ลด 90% เหลือ 21.90 บาท
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Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc ลด 66% เหลือ 125.46 บาท
Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair ลด 66% เหลือ 125.46 บาท
Danganronpa V3: Killing Harmony ลด 66% เหลือ 159.46 บาท
Danganronpa Another Episode: Ultra Despair Girls ลด 66% เหลือ 190.06 บาท
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Danganronpa 1/2/V3 ลด 75% เหลือ 307.77 บาท
Absolute Despair Collection ลด 69% เหลือ 396.87 บาท
Danganronpa 1 + 2 ลด 69% เหลือ 225.82 บาท
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รายละเอียดเพิ่มเติมดูที่หน้าร้านค้า
https://store.steampowered.com/publisher/SPIKECHUNSOFT
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ดีลนี้หมดเวลาในวันที่ 17 พ.ย.
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เอาที่แนะนำก็ Danganronpa, Zero Escape, STEINS;GATE, KATANA KAMI
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แค่เติมเงินก็ได้ Steam Wallet แล้ว >> GetSteamWallet.com
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Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War สั่งจองล่วงหน้าลด 10% เหลือ $53.99 ประมาณ 1690 บาท (BattleNet) ดูที่นี่ - https://bit.ly/31uAauU
同時也有11部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過15萬的網紅pennyccw,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Trey Burke won’t admit the braided hair is a tribute to his idol, Hall of Famer Allen Iverson. The Knicks’ new starting point guard does admit, though...
「one way heroics」的推薦目錄:
one way heroics 在 เกมถูกบอกด้วย v.2 Facebook 的最佳貼文
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แพ็คใหม่จาก Humble นะครัช ครั้งนี้คือ HUMBLE PLAYISM ANNIVERSARY BUNDLE รายละเอียดมีดังนี้
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รายละเอียดเพิ่มเติมดูที่หน้าร้านค้า
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อนึ่ง Steam คีย์
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อสอง ดีลนี้หมดเวลาในอีก 14 วัน
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อสาม ก็ตามชื่อแพ็คคือรวมเกมของค่าย Playism แพ็คนี้ตัว $1 คุ้มมากๆ เฉลี่ยเกมละ 5 บาทโดยประมาณ ส่วนเกมเด่นในแพ็คนี้ก็ GOCCO OF WAR, Mitsurugi Kamui Hikae, One Way Heroics, Mad Father, Momodora: Reverie Under The Moonlight สรุปแพ็คนี้กด $10 ก็ยังคุ้ม
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เกมดีราคาถูกแบบนี้
ไม่สอยได้ไงพี่น้องงงง
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Steam Wallet, Battle.net Code, PSN ซื้อง่าย ได้โค๊ดทันที >> GGKeyStore.com
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Command and Conquer: The Ultimate Collection ลดเหลือ $5.09 ประมาณ 160 บาท (Origin) ดูที่นี่ - https://bit.ly/2N3Pkzl
one way heroics 在 เกมถูกบอกด้วย v.2 Facebook 的最讚貼文
Playism ลดจากใจผู้จัดจำหน่าย ในเว็บสตีม รับส่วนลดพิเศษถึง 80% ดังนี้
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Pixel Game Maker MV / アクションゲームツクールMV ลด 25% เหลือ 786.75 บาท
Momodora: Reverie Under The Moonlight ลด 50% เหลือ 109.50 บาท
One Way Heroics ลด 60% เหลือ 39.60 บาท...
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one way heroics 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最佳解答
Trey Burke won’t admit the braided hair is a tribute to his idol, Hall of Famer Allen Iverson. The Knicks’ new starting point guard does admit, though, he is striving to come close to Iverson’s grandeur.
Burke has done Iverson proud on back-to-back nights. One night after leading to the Knicks to victory in Washington with late heroics in his first start for the team, Burke did one better in notching a career-high 42 points — 35 after halftime — to go with 12 assists on Monday.
It wasn’t enough to stop Kemba Walker and the Hornets in a 137-128 overtime thriller at Spectrum Center. Walker posted 11 of his 31 points in overtime and hit a game-tying 3-pointer with 17 seconds left in regulation over Michael Beasley.
Burke had a chance to win it in regulation. After waving off Hornacek’s timeout gesture, Burke wound down the clock, waved off a pick from Luke Kornet, lost control of the ball and had to heave up a desperation airball at the buzzer. But wins and losses aren’t as important to the Knicks in March and April as finding their 2018-19 point guard. In his two starts, Burke is making the case he’ll be their starting man next season.
“Charlotte continued to allow me to see what I can get off the screen and I took advantage of it,’’ Burke said. “I’m not thinking about having a bad game. That’s how I played in the past. Now I don’t what care what no one thinks. That’s how I can play freely. Being a young player in the league, sometimes it takes longer to adjust.’’
Late Sunday, after his first start as a Knick resulted in a rare road win over the Wizards, Burke sat in the visitors’ locker room next to his former Michigan buddy, Tim Hardaway Jr., who recently described a Burke performance as filled with “his little A.I. moves.”
“I just got tired of cutting my hair,” Burke said of the Iverson comparison. “I think the fans saw it and ran with it.”
Against Washington, he showed flashes of Iverson’s razzle-dazzle, willing the Knicks to victory with 19 points, three steals and three assists.
Monday, it was Iverson deluxe — shooting 19-for-31 from the field in becoming the first Knick since Bernard King in 1985 to post a 40-12 game.
“Nothing new to me,’’ Hardaway said. “I’ve been seen him doing this since we were at school in Michigan. He’s meant to be here. He’s supposed to be here. He’s not a G-League player, he’s not an overseas player.’’
The 2013 Utah lottery pick is in the middle of reversing a reputation as a bust in 29 games with the Knicks. It seems management finally noticed enough to allow Knicks coach Jeff Hornacek to give Burke his first start.
“I got a long way to go,” said Burke, who has a partially guaranteed deal for next season. “I know that. A.I. is a goal. Pound for pound, one of the greatest to ever play. I want to get there one day. I believe it.”
The Michigan man and former NCAA Tournament hero had to restart from the bottom. But Burke has the kind of Iverson brashness these young Knicks will need next season.
“When I get my hair braided, everyone’s like, ‘You look like Iverson, you got the tattoos, the way you move,’” Burke said. “More than anything, it’s my movements and crossover. That’s all from watching him. His mid-range. I watched a lot of Michael Jordan. Those were two guys who inspired me to play the game of basketball. I can remember being 4, 5 years old watching those two.”
one way heroics 在 pennyccw Youtube 的精選貼文
Tom Lemming remembers the first time he saw Allen Iverson play, back when Iverson was at Bethel High School in Hampton, Virginia. By that time, Iverson was a known quantity. Even in the talent-rich Tidewater region, in eastern Virginia, Iverson's star power stood out, and he was being discussed as a blue-chip recruit. Lemming got on a plane to see for himself.
"He had terrific reaction, instincts, loose hips, and a great vertical," Lemming told VICE Sports. "A lot of people bring it up and ask me how good he was. He was a great player. Not a good player, but a great football player."
In some alternate universe, Iverson might have become the same sort of path-breaking star in football that he ultimately would be in the NBA. The same live-wire athleticism and fearless ferocity that would make him a legend on the court—and, as of Friday's induction in Springfield, a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame—made him a force on the gridiron, too. Iverson fielded scholarship offers from major college football programs at the same time as he weighed basketball offers. The choice he made wound up changing basketball, but Lemming, a well-known national football recruiting analyst for the past 38 years, believes that Iverson could have made an impact if he'd stuck with the sport that was his first love. "He would've made the NFL," Lemming said. "Who knows, he could've been an NFL Hall of Famer."
The Showtime documentary Iverson features footage of Iverson playing football on the fields at Aberdeen elementary school in Hampton for coach Gary Moore, who served as a mentor for Iverson. Moore is now Iverson's personal manager.
"From day one, he actually wanted to jump right in and play," Moore said in the documentary. "He wanted to be my star player. That aggression and that enthusiasm is what I admired most about him. When I saw him dance and move, completely reverse his field all the way back around and not allow any of those kids to touch him, that's when I really said, 'Wow, this boy's something.'"
All the local high schools recruited Iverson. He ended up at Bethel in part because Dennis Kozlowski, the school's football coach and athletics director, had coached Iverson's aunt in high school track and field.
When Iverson was a five-foot-six, 145-pound eighth grader, hundreds of fans would come out to watch him play for Bethel's junior varsity team. The next year, he started at wide receiver and safety on the varsity. In his sophomore season, Kozlowski moved Iverson to quarterback but still played him on defense. As a defensive back, Iverson tied a Virginia record by intercepting five passes in one game and helped Bethel to an undefeated regular season before losing in the first round of the playoffs.
verson committed himself to sports. He played basketball most of the year and only played football from August through December, which didn't seem to hinder his development. As a junior, Iverson led Bethel to the 1992 Virginia state championship against E.C. Glass High School of Lynchburg, which had lost the title game the previous year. A few days before the championship, E.C. Glass coach Bo Henson drove the 200 miles from Lynchburg to Hampton to watch Bethel's semifinal game against Huguenot. Bethel got off to a slow start and trailed 16-0 in the fourth quarter.
"Somebody looked at me and said, 'Hey, don't count 'em out. Iverson's gonna bring 'em back,'" Henson said.
Iverson did just that. He threw a touchdown pass, successfully completed a pair of two-point conversions, and ran for two touchdowns, including a two-yard quarterback sneak in overtime to clinch the 22-16 victory. Before facing Bethel, Henson clipped out newspaper articles on Iverson and placed them on the desk of Tate Gallagher, a student in his history class and E.C. Glass's starting quarterback. Gallagher and others had never heard of Iverson.
"He was trying to warn me how good this person was," Gallagher said.
When Gallagher arrived at City Stadium in Richmond, he wondered what all the fuss was about. During warm-ups, he and his teammates looked over at Iverson getting ready for the game. They weren't too impressed. "We were like, 'Man, his legs look like noodles and his arms like noodles. We got this,'" Gallagher said.
That confidence didn't survive long past kickoff. In the first quarter, Iverson ran for a touchdown and returned a punt 60 yards for another. He later intercepted two passes on defense and threw for 201 yards in Bethel's 27-0 victory, the school's first state championship since 1976. "His speed was just extraordinary," Gallagher said. "He was so quick."
Iverson's heroics didn't surprise Henson, who coached E.C. Glass for 21 years. During that time, he faced future NFL quarterback Michael Vick and receiver Ronald Curry, who was the national high school player of the year as a quarterback in 1996. Neither of those guys compared with Iverson, he says.
one way heroics 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最佳貼文
The mission was clear: Go to the NBA. Take over. Do so in a way that told the basketball world a new era had arrived.
If you were not a part of his inner circle, Allen Iverson didn't give a damn about you. The thing is, he was atypical in that he wanted you to know it, specifically because it was his way of saying he knew you would never give a damn about him anyway, no matter how much you smiled in his face.
His talent would make you care.
His performance would make you salivate.
His achievements would make you kneel.
All the way to the Hall of Fame, someday.
Iverson's story is not foreign, of course. It's similar to that of many players in today's NBA. Most are African-Americans. Most come from impoverished backgrounds. Almost all strive to elevate themselves to a level of greatness that has forced a global audience to pay attention, to emulate, then join.
Yet very few have ever impacted basketball like Iverson. No matter how hard they try.
"I always tell folks I played every game like it's my last," Iverson said earlier this week, in advance of his Hall of Fame induction on Friday. "And I meant that. But sometimes I don't think people realize what I mean when I say that. It's not just about playing so hard; it's why I played so hard. You know what I mean? It's what I wondered would happen to me if I didn't do it.
"You've got to know my history and how I truly feel to realize where I'm coming from."
But few will ever know. No matter how hard they try.
During to a career that would culminate with Iverson averaging 26.7 points per game, winning four scoring titles and one MVP -- at 6 feet, 165 pounds -- folks witnessed his heroics but barely knew the intimate challenges he faced.
Iverson knew being incarcerated, then granted clemency, wasn't a likable trait for Madison Avenue; that he wasn't the ideal spokesman for the NBA. Iverson knew a visibly polished Kobe Bryant was preferable to the tattoos, cornrows and street persona proudly worn on the sleeves, neck and elsewhere on this former All-American out of Georgetown.
But Iverson also knew everyone couldn't be Bryant or Michael Jordan. He knew that if MJ and Kobe -- and no one else -- were the standard, society wouldn't have a true depiction of NBA stars to come.
"I was 6 feet, so folks could relate to that," he once told me. "I was 165 pounds, so folks could relate to that. But I was also someone who wanted to be me, judged for what I do and who I am, instead of what you say I'm suppose to be. It's true that some [people] don't want to play the game, but a lot of dudes don't know how to. And even the ones that do, most ain't going to be accepted. So what about them?"
Even today that is still a legitimate question.
LeBron James has helped provide answers by showing you he can be a champion, pre-eminent role model and global icon, even if tattoos are draped all over his body. Steph Curry has proven as much, as well, by being a baby-faced, long-range assassin who, at 6-foot-3, looks like a regular dude instead of a Goliath of a man.
From Carmelo Anthony to Chris Paul to Dwyane Wade and beyond, players are speaking not just with their play on the court, but with their willingness to address issues off the court. And although Iverson is no innovator in that department, his willingness to express himself certainly made it easier for athletes to open up more in a day and age that's demanding it, not asking.