Video yükleniyor...

Video Yüklenemedi

Ana Sayfaya Dön

This Week’s Beamable Spotlight: IMMORTAL: Gates of Pyre. Command armies as a godlike Immortal across Nuath, Shael, and Xur in this F2P strategy game. With unique units, epic spells, and world-shaping powers, you’ll wage a cosmic battle for dominance in a living, strategic universe. Stay tuned as we dive...

98,873 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

7 Yorum

Biggy 👑 (Ø,G) profil fotoğrafı
Biggy 👑 (Ø,G)1 yıl önce

Cosmic battle? My Tuesday nights are already cosmic enough thanks to Taco Bell.

4Petr profil fotoğrafı
4Petr1 yıl önce

Realmente o trabalho está incrivel

shawon ahmed joy profil fotoğrafı
shawon ahmed joy1 yıl önce

Amazing

Ryzed profil fotoğrafı
Ryzed1 yıl önce

Immortal yes

MD MILON Mondol (Ø,G)「☄️G☄️」(🍊,💊) Solix profil fotoğrafı
MD MILON Mondol (Ø,G)「☄️G☄️」(🍊,💊) Solix1 yıl önce

Valo project

BoRsA🧭CrYpTo ⛺ profil fotoğrafı
BoRsA🧭CrYpTo ⛺1 yıl önce

ok

Md. Roknuzzaman Khan 🫧Flow3 Network 🌐 profil fotoğrafı
Md. Roknuzzaman Khan 🫧Flow3 Network 🌐1 yıl önce

Great project

Benzer Videolar

The future encounter between Mark Grayson and Immortal is a quiet but deeply unsettling moment. Mark travels into the future with one goal—to kill Immortal and stop a dark timeline from continuing—but what he finds is far from the powerful leader he once knew. The world around them feels empty and worn down, reflecting the state of Immortal himself. When Mark finally meets him, Immortal is no longer stable or composed. Centuries of living have taken a toll on his mind. He appears confused, almost fragile, weighed down by endless time and the loss of everyone he has ever known. Instead of attacking, Immortal begins to speak in a way that immediately shifts the tension. He looks at Mark with a strange sense of recognition and curiosity, as if searching for answers. He starts talking about his condition—not as a power, but as a sickness. To him, immortality has become something unbearable, something that has slowly destroyed his sense of self. He asks Mark if he has found a cure… not for death, but for his sickness. The question carries a quiet desperation. Immortal is not afraid to die; instead, he seems to welcome the idea of it. What he truly wants is relief from the endless burden of living. His words reveal a man who is mentally exhausted, someone who has lived far beyond what any mind can handle. For Mark, the moment becomes more than a mission. He is forced to face the reality of what Immortal has become—a broken version of a hero, and possibly a glimpse of what unchecked time and power could do to him as well.

Samuel C. Okanume

19,955 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

The story of how the Kremlin turned the "Immortal Regiment" into a propaganda tool. In 2011, Tomsk journalists launched the "Immortal Regiment," a remembrance march where people carried portraits of relatives who participated in World War II. Back then, 6,000 people took to the streets with photos of their ancestors. The idea was simple: to preserve the family memory of the feat. But two years later, the Kremlin saw in the march the potential for propaganda. By 2013, the Immortal Regiment was held in 120 Russian cities under the control of the authorities, and in 2015, the procession was held for the first time on Red Square with Putin in attendance. Initially a voluntary initiative, it quickly turned into a compulsory one. Students, public sector employees, and even schoolchildren were forced to participate, often being given portraits of strangers. This led to absurd situations: after the marches, portraits of war heroes were found in garbage cans, and photos of Hollywood stars, porn actors, and even Nazis appeared in the columns. The event, intended as a personal commemoration, became a cynical spectacle. 🔷 Since 2014, after the occupation of Crimea and the start of the war in Donbas, the Immortal Regiment has become a tool to justify Russian aggression. The Kremlin began to promote the image of Russia as the sole victor of Nazism, ignoring the contribution of other countries of the Allies. Portraits of terrorists like Givi and Motorola appeared in the processions and, after 2022, 'heroes of the SMO.' The event created to honor World War II veterans now glorified the war against Ukraine. The Kremlin used the "Immortal Regiment" to incite militaristic sentiments. The "Z" symbols, which became an analog of the Nazi swastika, and the participation of children in the processions were reminiscent of propaganda events of the Third Reich. In 2022, the organizers of the movement publicly disassociated themselves from what was happening, saying that the event had lost its original meaning and had become a political tool. 🔷 Outside Russia, the Immortal Regiment has become an instrument of 'soft power.' Russian embassies and consulates organized marches in dozens of countries, promoting the Kremlin's version of history. Even after 2022, the marches continued, although many countries, including post-Soviet ones, began to abandon them. In Kazakhstan, for example, the procession was renamed "Let's Bow to the Heroes," urging not to politicize the memory, while in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, the authorities opposed the use of the event for propaganda purposes. The Kremlin is using the banning of the Immortal Regiment marches in Europe to accuse the West of 'Nazism' to justify its own aggression. This is part of a strategy where Russia portrays itself as a victim and the war in Ukraine as a fight against fascism.' 🔷 The Immortal Regiment has turned from a remembrance march into a symbol of Putin's propaganda glorifying war and aggression. The feat of ancestors has become a justification for war crimes. Today, the Immortal Regiment is not a memory but a tool that threatens peace. It symbolizes not "never again" but "we can do it again."

Anton Gerashchenko

40,445 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce