#bermuda triangle

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I have a deep love for Native American, Aztec, Mayan, and Incan Cultures. I also have a deep love for European History (my favorites being Pre-Roman Brittania, Ancient Greece, and Age of Exploration). I also love the fantasy genre and I am a huge fan of RPG (in case you couldn’t tell). Thus I love the games I am about to point out.

Dragons Conquer America and Chronica: Age of Exploration.

Both are historical fantasy games set in/around the age of exploration.

Both are epic.

DCA, by Burning Games, is a great game with a unique system that involves Dragon Riders, Werejaguars, Headhunting Tribal Necromancers, Conquistadors, Inquisitors, Missionaries, Courtesans, Aristocrats, and more as Player Options. There are spells that require human sacrifice, spells that enable you to become the vessel for the horsemen of the apocalypse, spells that enable you to summon a giant serpent, seduction magic, magic tattoos, and more. Also, Ave Maria and Pater Noster are spells for Christian Spellcasters, while the Norse are under the rule of Giants, King Arthur is still alive and leads an army of Fairies, Eastern Europe is ruled by Vampires, and the Muslims have allied with Djinn.  It is all really cool.

https://burning-games.com/dragons-conquer-america/


Chronica is a Pathfinder setting set in a historical fantasy version of our world during the age of exploration. There are Olmec Lizardmen, and Empire of Rakshasa, Atlantis, and The Library of Alexandria. You can be an Atlantean Elf, an Olmec Lizardmen, a Turkish Artillerymen, a Half-Rakshasa, and so much more. Also, Genghis Khan is back (he was frozen in stone all this time), and you should heed the rumors of the Bermuda Triangle. It is all really cool.

https://www.chronica-aoe.com/#!home/cjg9


I highly recommend both and give them both 5 out of 5 stars.

‪When you were younger, the Bermuda Triangle seemed like it was gonna be a much bigger problem than it actually is‬

tachyon-at-rest:

ingridverse:

kragehund-again:

biggest threats to a 5yo’s life

  • bermuda triangle
  • quicksand
  • sharks/lions/wolves (creatures)
  • lava
  • getting sucked down the drain in the bathtub

Is the Bermuda Triangle still a thing?

@ingridverse Bermuda could be destroyed by a supervolcano tomorrow, sinking it completely beneath the ocean surface and starship pilots 500+ years in the future would still be superstitious of the Bermuda Triangle.

I mean, if that happened it would be pretty good evidence of the dangers of the Bermuda Triangle.

Claim: Crystal pyramids have been located on the floor of the “Bermuda Triangle”. Verdic

Claim: Crystal pyramids have been located on the floor of the “Bermuda Triangle”.

Verdict: FALSE

The screenshot of the purported pyramid originates from a video on MSN, which cites the tablod Weekly World News as its source. The Weekly World News, the paper that brought the world Batboy, invents all of its stories. The article cited is from a 1991 issue.

Meanwhile, the link provided goes to EndAllDisease.com, which seems to have removed the page on “crystal pyramids”. It seems to be an alternative medicine site with a conspiratorial bent, praising countries and cities that ban GMOs and fluoridation.

However, what about the story itself? Claims of Crystal Pyramids originate in the 70s with Dr. Ray Brown. In this clip from the 70s series In Search Of…, he talks about his claimed discovery of the pyramids. Conveniently, his camera was destroyed during a storm just before he discovered the pyramid leaving no visual evidence. The only physical evidence he left is a mysterious crystal sphere he claims possessed magical properties…but he never allowed these properties to be scientifically tested.

As the names of this alleged French and American scientists are unknown, the video covering their “amazing” find cites a false tabloid, and given the lack of any photographic or physical evidence of the journey undertaken by Ray Brown, that until any additional evidence presents itself it can be said safely that there are no crystal pyramids hidden under the waters of the so-called “Bermuda Triangle”.

Sources:This thread on Skeptics Stackexchange and the answer by Beofett; Snopes.com


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