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  1. Short description: Remove the badges/insignia from the two below listed jackets to implement for civilian use and port the cowboy hat to males. Detailed description: The Jackets When searching through the clothing pre-blacklist fix I noticed these two jackets, to any LEO RPer I'm sure they're nothing new but to a stinky civilian peasant like myself I've yet to see these in use but noticed how good they'd be for civilian/non LEO characters. Removing the patches would be extremely easy if they're just textures, have my horrendous mockup of how they'd look: I'd do the retexturing myself and offer a few new color combinations with the suggestion but unfortunately all server files are encrypted post-RageMP1.1 so it's in the hands of the modding team if it was to be considered. I've heard the two jackets above are for females too but couldn't confirm, if there IS I'd love to see them retextured and added for female character use too. The Hat Pretty simple port as always, just needs the name changing and added to males, everything above the shoulders is synced between the male and female character model so no need to edit the actual hat model. Commands to add: N/A Items to add: N/A How would your suggestion improve the server? More player customization, wasted potential if the jackets are only used for cold weather and limited to a small circle of players on the server. Additional information: N/A.
    5 points
  2. Introduction This is an introductory guide to white inmate roleplay. Its focus is on jail but aspects of prison roleplay are covered too. It’s a broad overview of what the white inmate scene looks like in California correctional systems alongside information about realistic character behaviour and motivations. I’ve also included extensive further reading below that will be useful to anyone who already knows the basics. Demographics As of 2019, The Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department (LASD) records that 15% of its LA County Jail inmate population are white. Across all California correctional facilities, white inmates are overall by far the smallest of the three most populous groups. (In LA County Jail in 2019, Black and Hispanic inmates accounted for 29% and 53% of the population respectively.) White inmates are normally a minority wherever they are housed. Consequently, they depend on their longstanding alliance with Sureños, whose numbers dwarf their own. However, this alliance is far from absolute; it is dependent on the behaviour of white inmates in any particular facility – instances of disruptive behaviour and bad etiquette will still result in hostilities if they go unaddressed. As such, there is an obvious incentive for white inmates to avoid creating problems for the other groups that far outnumber them. Specific problems may include unpaid debts, causing lockdowns, and failing to appropriately regulate whites who create issues. (White and Sureño prison inmate groups still have their own spaces, but they are more likely to share access to payphones, yard equipment and communal TV areas.) White Inmate Structures & Groups The person chiefly responsible for the unenviable task of addressing issues among whites inside is called a shot caller. In jail, the white inmates with authority are often just more experienced individuals with some support and willingness to take charge – not necessarily prison gang members. (White groups are different to the Sureños in this respect because fewer of their members are directly involved in gangs and no white prison gang has the same degree of control over its race as the Mexican Mafia prison gang has over Sureño inmates.) Prominent prison gang members will often assume any positions with decision making responsibilities - this is partly because it is in a prison gang's nature to exert control over others, partly because of the belief that the gang is best equipped to make decisions, and partly so that the gang can ensure that any decisions made will advance or protect its own interests. A shot caller may appoint representatives to be responsible for white inmates in different sub-sections of a facility. Because the jail population is so transient, these positions will change more often as people are released or transferred to prison. Prison structures tend to be more stable. Programs for white inmates in jails are generally more relaxed and straightforward than on prison yards, partly because of how quickly people come and go, which makes enforcing rules more difficult, and partly because the inmate populations are on average less militant than those on prison yards. However, stealing, accruing debt, talking to guards, and making issues with other races will cause a person trouble irrespective of where they are housed. On higher level prison yards, there are more rules and more severe punishments for infractions. It is easier to enforce these rules because inmates are moved around less often and because there are more militant inmates (often lifers) around who are willing to punish rule-breakers either out of principle or to advance or maintain their status. White inmates can be broadly divided into two categories: peckerwoods and skinheads. These groups normally mix together despite the differences between them. ‘Peckerwood’ is a loose term that has been adopted into prison and jail vernacular to refer to any white criminal. The range of people who fit this label is vast; it can include everyone from petty offenders who just want to do their time without any issues to senior members of white prison gangs who are actively involved in serious criminality. Some peckerwoods distance themselves from white inmates who avoid any involvement in prison politics or violence by demeaningly referring to them as 'Caucasians' – this illustrates the strong desire among inmate groups not to be associated with weakness or cowardice. Skinheads in this context are a subset of white criminals. California skinhead gangs are primarily motivated by money (often for hard drugs) and and use racist iconography and ideology to support this motivation. In prison especially, where so much is understood through the prism of race, their ideology can be alluring to potential new recruits. Skinheads will posit themselves as more militant and serious than their non-skinhead counterparts because on average they are. In prison, they often adopt tougher programs and punish infractions more seriously. A lot of white inmates want to get out without involving themselves in politics or risking themselves to injury or further criminal proceedings – this mentality is much more common in jails, where most people are either still on trial or serving short sentences that will soon be over. These inmates are more likely to be victimised or exploited, but it will largely depend on the individual and the attitudes of the other inmates housed with them. Even serious inmates won’t want to commit major crimes and risk additional charges if they can help it. This is one of the reasons why beatings and non-fatal attacks are far more common than killings – which are normally reserved for the worst offenders such as child molesters. Politicking is one way inmates avoid risking additional charges and time inside by negotiating their way out of committing crimes on behalf of others. For instance, a white inmate might argue that they shouldn’t commit a stabbing against a snitch because they have already put in work – they may then go further and try volunteering somebody else for the task. These negotiations cause all manner of acrimony and conflict between inmates. Prison Gangs Some white inmates know that in all likelihood they will spend the rest of their lives behind bars. Doomed to this environment, prison gangs offer them structure, protection, money, status and meaning – as well as a corrupted sense of self-betterment. This is why prison gangs, which basically exist to fulfil these needs, can be so enticing. (It is unlikely that inmates serving short sentences or nearing their release will seek to join a prison gang – there normally isn’t sufficient motivation to do so.) The most prominent white prison gang in California is still the Aryan Brotherhood (AB). They are the oldest, most infamous, and in many respects most seasoned. Their reputation and the reputations and actions of their members have helped them to maintain this position despite challenges from federal indictments and past opposition movements within other white gangs. Partly to overcome the restrictive nature of jails and prisons, and partly because of efforts by law enforcement, facility staff, and policy makers to disrupt criminal operations, gangs need to coordinate with each other. The AB routinely uses members from other prison gangs to conduct business on its behalf. Some of these inmates will act on the AB’s behalf in the hope that doing so will allow them to graduate into the gang. This cooperation enables the AB to affect what happens in facilities that it has no physical presence in. The AB’s reach allows them to exert influence over other white gang members and career criminals, most of whom are expecting to sooner or later do prison time. Their reach was further extended after the 2015 Ashker settlement, which ruled that prison gang members can no longer be kept in solitary confinement on the basis of their gang membership alone. (Consequently, the vast majority of senior gang members were released from years of restrictive segregation and put back in far less restrictive settings where they now exert more direct control.) Beyond other inmates, the AB uses people on the streets for its business. Like most inmates, prison gang members have people they are close to who are not in prison – these people may be partners, relatives, ex-cons they met inside, and street gang members they may know personally or by proxy. The use of these contacts provides the AB with more influence on the outside. The more influential prison gang members will have syndicates of people they can get to act on their behalf. Other prominent white prison gangs include Public Enemy Number One (or PENI) and the Nazi Low Riders (NLR). PENI continues to maintain influence in jails and prisons, but it remains answerable to the AB who have in recent years organized hits against some of its more disruptive members. Meanwhile, the NLR’s influence has significantly diminished after the failed politicking of its sub-factions against the AB resulted in many of its surviving members moving into protective custody settings. These prison gangs mainly make money through the drugs trade, often by trafficking drugs into jails and prisons. Because of the relationship between substance misuse and criminal behaviour, the inmate market for drugs is huge. Corrupt staff, relatives, attorneys, street gang members, and inmates themselves are all known to smuggle drugs inside. Gang members will coordinate drug deals on the streets too, using contraband cellphones and trusted representatives to arrange transactions between parties. Apart from drugs, prison gang members often make money by attempting to tax trades (i.e., the profits a white inmate in a particular cell block makes from selling tattoos or sweets) or by monopolizing trades themselves. Gang members are always finding new and creative ways to make more money. There are numerous other white gangs beyond those mentioned above. Some are small and local whereas others are larger and more spread out. There’s generally no issue with roleplaying a character from a fictional San Andreas gang – this allows you to tailor the concept to GTAW without worrying about how closely it matches a real-life counterpart. In California, all white gangs are expected to fall under the authority of the AB. Historically, the AB has been unwilling to cede power to other white prison gangs – it expects all white gangs to be subordinate to it and it targets those, such as the United Society of Aryan Skinheads (USAS), who refuse to be. Prison gangs are more active in prisons than in jails because prisons are where most of their members are based. Prison gangs are also more likely to recruit people who have done time on higher-level yards over those who have only ever done time on lower-level yards or in jail. There are exceptions, but it is generally worth incorporating prison time into your character’s backstory if you want to roleplay an already established prison gang member. Senior prison gang members in prominent gangs have normally spent many years or decades behind bars. Like anyone who has spent decades in a career, they know a lot about what they do. They are very accustomed to manipulating people, politicking, and generally exerting their will. They know how to deal with instigators and others who mean to challenge or undermine them. Without doing enough research, these characters are difficult to portray convincingly. If your supposedly senior prison gang member character is perceived to be very naïve or ignorant about matters that he should be familiar with, at best he won’t be taken seriously and at worst he will be targeted for being an impersonator. Start with a character who’s new to jail if you as a player aren’t familiar with the setting. Behaviour & Culture Respect is very important in jails and prisons. These are environments busy with volatile and violent individuals with precious egos. Any perceived slight can result in violence. Instances of disrespect, intentional or not, can cause resentment that will brew into violence if not addressed. For these reasons, inmates will typically treat their peers with respect unless they have reasons not to – especially on higher level prison yards where the most violent and seasoned inmates reside. The rules and expectations are less demanding and widely observed in jail settings, but only to a point. There is often very little to do inside but ruminate on other people's offences and what they might mean or how they might be dealt with. Boredom can be a big motivating factor behind instances of violence. For these reasons, inmates making sure others know they are on cordial terms with them is a routine part of day-to-day life. Tattoos are a big part of inmate identity and culture. In a place where clothing is basically uniform, they are the main means inmates have to express aspects of their personal identity. They are usually a point of pride for their wearers. Certain tattoos have specific widely subscribed to meanings – for example, they may denote membership in a certain gang or that the wearer has committed a murder. You should think seriously about what tattoos your character has (if any) and their meaning. It gives more flavour and personality to your character if you describe at least some of their tattoos individually. (The exact meaning of tattoos normally varies depending on where you are, and some meanings are more widely agreed than others.) If an inmate has tattoos they didn't 'earn' (because they didn't do what the tattoo is meant to represent), they can be targeted for assault. This is because they are perceived to be taking credit for something they never did. They are also diluting the symbol's meaning. I recommend going through the process of earning tattoos in character instead of your character having them already – unless you really want to play an established inmate. Conclusion This guide has discussed white inmates as a whole and the ways they organize into groups in overcrowded, claustrophobic, and chaotic jail and prison settings. However, all inmate groups are ultimately made up of individuals who mostly care about themselves before other inmates. Personality clashes, misunderstandings and pent-up frustrations between individuals are commonplace and lead to conflict. White inmates will politick against people they don’t like, especially other white inmates. It may be over disagreements about how a certain issue was handled or an unhappiness with how a particular shot caller operates. Politicking happens between gangs and within gangs as well as between individuals. White inmates fight among themselves far more than they fight with other races. Your character’s motivations shouldn’t align neatly with every other white inmate or gang. Your character’s desire to get out of jail or prison will be in conflict with another character’s desire to get him to conceal drugs in his cell or commit violence. You should always be thinking about your character’s individual motivations – and definitely not just seeing him as part of a homogeneous white inmate hive mind. Roleplaying inside is a lot about how your character balances his various desires against those of other inmates and the whites as a whole. Further Reading & Viewing 1) Large Hazard’s guide on Sureño prison roleplay also has information on kites and other helpful stuff: https://forum.gta.world/en/topic/26420-surenos-the-mexican-mafia-a-guide-to-sureno-prison-roleplay/. 2) Large Hazard’s other guide has information on different backstories for people who want to roleplay stays in county jail – this guide is especially useful if you want to roleplay in jail longer term: https://forum.gta.world/en/topic/49053-roleplaying-a-stay-in-county-jail/. 3) David Skarbek’s 2014 book The Social Order of the Underworld: How Prison Gangs Govern The American Penal System is great. It describes the development of gangs in California as a logical response to the nature of their environment. It’s good for understanding the psychosocial factors that shape inmate behaviour. 4) Chris Blatchford’s 2008 book The Black Hand: The Story of Rene "Boxer" Enriquez and His Life in the Mexican Mafia is an excellent account of a former Mexican Mafia member's time in the prison gang. It has a lot of still very relevant information about the mentality of gang members. 5) Glenn Langohr’s prison books (written around 2013) are very easy reads. They’re fictional stories inspired by his time in California prisons. See: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00EJ6ZDVW/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_hsch_vapi_taft_p1_i7 and his author’s page for others. 6) Joseph McCarty’s 2011 book Mainline: (Based on Some Real Shit.) is a fun read about prison. This is another fictional book written by an author who has done prison time. 7) David Pyrooz and Scott Decker’s 2019 book Competing for Control Gangs and the Social Order of Prisons is another academic text that explores similar issues to Skarbek’s. It is quite dry but worth reading if you enjoyed Social Order. 8 ) Prison POV YouTube channel features Splinter sipping water and talking about California gangs and prison and jail stories – it’s good: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWoJp5FsLQgLzPTHWeBri6A/videos. 9) Stories Written By A Current Prisoner is another really good YouTube channel – this has loads of interviews with white inmates and ex-white prison gang members: https://www.youtube.com/c/StoriesWrittenByACurrentPrisoner. 10) Criminal complaint regarding prominent Aryan Brotherhood members that details their operations, including moving drugs into prison, in close detail: https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/AryanBrotherhood-COMPLAINT.pdf. 11) Useful summary of the 2015 Ashker v Governor of California settlement, which resulted in many prison gang members moving out of Special Housing Units (SHUs) into less restrictive housing: https://ccrjustice.org/sites/default/files/attach/2015/08/2015-09-01-Ashker-settlement-summary.pdf. 12) AfterPrisonShow has lots of videos on day-to-day prison life stories and some useful ‘how to’ videos: https://www.youtube.com/c/AfterPrisonShow/videos. 13) Lockdown is a National Geographic TV series. Episode 4 of Season 1, Gang War, is interesting and features hostilities between white and Southern Mexican inmate groups – it can be seen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sjo6Qo_Koxg&t=1040s&ab_channel=natysantos. 14) ReasonTV 2014 has a short on the impact that Realignment policies, which are meant to manage prison populations, have had on jails: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPRrtTzsGpw&t=496s&ab_channel=ReasonTV. 15) An older LA County Jail documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uZDvv5oMcoE&ab_channel=Documentaries. 16) A YouTube playlist of videos about Twin Towers Jail: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFyhuYc_hgk&list=PLKM_nYjKHI-hcOLc_Jsa89sI2C5e4MIaX&ab_channel=HipHopWestTV. 17) AP News’ 2018 news article on the slaying of a PENI member. This also provides some insight into the relationship between different white prison gangs: https://apnews.com/article/86dc8ae0d5e44f129c48dfb52e370bb5. 18) Video on inmates making kites and fishing them. There are a few videos like this floating around: https://youtu.be/2CvDpAvJR84. 19) Tony Rafael’s 2009 book The Mexican Mafia is a useful account of how law enforcement and prosecutors investigate and prosecute gang killing cases. It also has some good information on how prison gangs (specifically eMe in this case) can develop over time. 20) Director Ric Roman Waugh’s 2017 movie Shot Caller is an entertaining look at a person’s progression through a white prison gang. It has some good scenes even if some of the plot points aren’t particularly grounded. 21) Director Ric Roman Waugh’s 2008 movie Felon is about a white inmate doing time on a SHU yard. It’s another fun watch that’s inspired by events in Corcoran State Prison where prison officers were staging fights between inmates. 22) A YouTube video of an interview with prominent Mexican Mafia dropout Rene ‘Boxer’ Enriquez about prison gang mentalities: https://youtu.be/rBZBrTgZKA8. 23) A PDF produced by the LASD which details the inmate demographics of their jails: https://lasd.org/transparency data/custody reports/Custody Division Population 2019 Fourth Quarter Report.pdf. 24) BLOOD ON THE RAZOR WIRE TV is a YouTube channel run by an ex-con who interviews other ex-cons and talks about prison. He also has a prison memoir that's available on Amazon Kindle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2BfsAN7eb-76zlPmVbetgQ. 25) a prisoner's awaking is a YouTube channel run by a former Sureño inmate - but it has a lot of useful stuff for people roleplaying white inmates too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnFXtgEYfIA&ab_channel=aprisoner’sawakening. 26) Gunnerz Collective is a YouTube channel run by a former Norteno inmate - again, it has useful stuff for general inmate roleplay too: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq-MN7w7kHRTMkTndnEV80Q. 27) A YouTube video of an older (early 2000s) Fox News segment by Chris Blatchford on prison riots and gang violence with footage of large scale yard riots: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0YvMjsFaEBE&ab_channel=ThusSpokeBaltazar. 28) Murder, Mayhem, and Meditation is a 2014 Vice News documentary about Salinas Valley State Prison in California: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RzOkf-mrDbM&ab_channel=VICENews. 29) A newspaper article based on a letter from a California inmate lifer who killed two paedophiles in 2020 after he was moved from a level three to a level two facility. It describes a lot of the attitudes almost all inmates have to those doing time for sex crimes and violent crimes against children: https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/02/20/exclusive-convicted-killer-confesses-to-murdering-two-child-molesters-in-ca-prison-says-his-warnings-to-guards-fell-on-deaf-ears/. 30) ISOLATED MINDS is another YouTube channel that interviews current inmates in California prisons. It is done by the same person who does Stories Written By A Current Prisoner: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCF-t8IiJKEW1dSNAdmibz1A. 31) Cordless has produced an excellent compendium on white gangs in California, complete with lots of sources and useful history: https://forum.gta.world/en/topic/86278-white-gangs-in-la-county/. 32) Profile on influential Aryan Brotherhood member Ronald Yandell and his politicking after being released from solitary confinement in 2015: https://www.sbsun.com/2019/09/01/build-an-army-aryan-brotherhood-leaders-attempted-to-rule-over-all-white-california-prison-gangs-feds-say/. 33) Mostly prison themed YouTube channel from a norteno perspective, but with lots of good general info: https://www.youtube.com/@HOMIEHangout.
    5 points
  3. Civil War Post civil war, the Somali capital was referred to as the 'White Pearl', because of its history of beach resorts with white-sand beaches running along its coast. Nearing the end of the cold war, communist Somalia fell into clan warfare, civil war erupting and tearing the country apart. Millions of Somali citizens fled the warzone to settle in stable countries as migrants and asylum seekers, leaving the Somali diaspora scattered across the globe. Los Santos The first Somali-Americans arrived in the early 1950s, working as sea-men in the states. It was not until the civil war began in the early 90s that Somalis began fleeing to the United States in large numbers, settling in states across America as migrants of war, making the U.S. the 2nd largest concentration globally of Somalis outside of Somalia with a total of 300,000 Somalis residing within the states. Attracted by left-leaning politicians and higher standards of living, many newly migrated Somalis settled in San Andrean cities like San Fierro and Los Santos. From the mid-90s to early 2000s, downtown LS became a small concentration of the LS Somali diaspora. Mali Money Boyz (M.M.B) The Mali Money Boyz (M.M.B) are a Somali-American street crew. The crew consists of Somali youth from impoverished households that have turned to crime in attempts to better their living conditions. The Mali Money Boyz operate out of the Fantastic Pl apartment complex, a low-income housing project located in downtown LS. Criminal activities committed by this group range from drug and weapon trafficking, to armed robbery and burglary.
    5 points
  4. I think we should also go as far as having to ask for permission to shoot someone as well if this gets implemented, I think that would be a pretty good idea. It would save us a lot of forum reports if the defending party accepted the fact that they will get shot now beforehand. So before you run or drive up to shoot someone just send them a friendly pm asking for their permission 😊
    4 points
  5. (This thread will follow the development of Liam Park(Park Yeon-Tae,) a 1st gen Korean immigrant. )
    3 points
  6. REPOSSESSED VEHICLE FOR IMMEDIATE AUCTION So ordered by the Hon. J. Thompson as terms in L. VOLKOV v. B. BRYANT, the following vehicle is now up for immediate auction: Pfister Comet SR Extensive aftermarket modifications done to numerous drivetrain components Aftermarket alarm with top-of-the-line antitheft system 1207MI on Odometer NORMALLY A $220,000 VEHICLE WHEN NEW AND STOCK AUCTION IS OPEN. BIDDING STARTING AT $100,000. BID INCREMENT OF $10,000 MINIMUM. AUCTION CLOSES SEPTEMBER, 28TH, 2021 AT 11:59PM
    3 points
  7. Hate to be one of them people but GTA V on PC is around 8 years old at this point. Selfish but we shouldn't hold back progression -- big or small -- because of some people's extremely outdated hardware. Also want to add a lot of people complaining about performance loss are also running high-end graphic mods that normally run off ENBs which have always been heavy on performance with it's frankenstein-esque implementation.
    3 points
  8. I still don't understand why you think it's a good idea adding 10.000 objects no one asked for, but not allowing business owners to map their own exteriors with a couple of objects that could make the overall roleplay better for everyone. Also, I run my game with the lowest setting on the grass because it makes my game lag. When are you gonna implement a command to remove the new vegetation? If I don't want the vegetation in my base game, why would I want it with a mod?
    3 points
  9. https://streamable.com/xef1q6
    3 points
  10. Warya abahawas walaalo Twista Cheese reigns supreme in Los Santos
    2 points
  11. I wouldn't blame GTA:W because you choose to run an unoptimized Patreon-farming mod that is designed around making you stay subscribed so you get the next version which is "more optimized".
    2 points
  12. Quite frankly I think you should have to ask for permission to type.
    2 points
  13. I USED TO BE ABLE TO PLAY AT 4K 60FPS UNTIL OGGY PLACED A BENCH IN THE STREET AND A DUMPSTER BACKWARDS, NOW LOOK AT ME ! Seriously though it runs just as it did before for me, not a notable change in FPS while also running QuantV so I'd be lying if I said I didn't want it to stay, really makes Vespucci and South-Central look and feel more authentic.
    2 points
  14. Stop trying to play 8k xmadkill3rx enb gta 6 with a gtx 1050 and you'll be fine
    2 points
  15. Overlords Outlaw Motorcycle Gang Overlords Outlaw Motorcycle gang attempts to portray a completely fictional african-american biker gang which hosts chapters in Arizona, Nevada and San Andreas. We have taken liberties due to being a fictional biker gang so we can come up with ideas that aren’t tied to a real life counterpart. This faction features unique roleplay regarding being a biker as we are one of the few black only motorcycle gangs. So if you are willing to chase the prospective stage in order to become an Overlord? Your character must be majority african-american. Exceptions can be made In-Game through roleplay but are not taken for granted. Although the club carries a 1%er diamond patch, they’re not automatically all hardcore criminals. The life of a biker carries more than crime alone and we advise characters to be part of activities, hobbies that might have nothing to do with the biker lifestyle. Female characters are welcomed; while not able to become an official member of the club itself. They are very influential on all parts of society and can support the club through different means. We encourage members to familiarize themselves with black culture to try avoid stereotyping and/or creating unrealistic roleplay while partaking a role in this faction. If you have any questions in regards to joining, other questions / concerns or player problems feel free to private-message @Seasniff
    2 points
  16. You got me locked up. It's fucked up. But guess what... There's still piss you gotta clean off those stupid walls.😆
    2 points
  17. Update 2.4.12 Additions Major map revamp - We've redeployed a new map mod to fully modify the existing Los Santos map to make it look more like Los Angeles, improve the overall immersion and California vibe from the map. Up to 10 000 objects have been added around Los Santos : trees, palms trees, benches in the street, terrasses with tables & chairs... Multiple new areas have been added which will bring new roleplay opportunities The county / forest areas have been improved with more vegetations The map revamp is now dynamically unloaded when you enter a house, so trees will not show inside your interiors anymore Added extra seats to the following vehicles LSFDEngine, LSFDCara, Stockade, Taco Updated the taco seat animation Changes Blood drops decay is now a bit slower Fixes Fixed a bug with the AFK system that was not making you go back to the correct dimension
    2 points
  18. Deadliest Catch: Part 4 最致命的捕獲
    2 points
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