First game was exactly fine but required too many routine actions. Second game reminds 'STORM Frontline Nations' but with more 'political sim' things inside, works pretty good even in an early version and feels much more polished overall.
Still... Most should know what China is capable of by now; and given the 40-some million male-to-female disparity (thanks to Mao's One Child Policy + a phallocentric culture), it makes sense for them to use the Norks as a "meat" conduit.
Man, nothing more than they always did. It's just that Western greed motivated gilding of the Sino communist lily, by our mainstream media sources, which provided the trickle of news from the place, hid the truth of who we actually sold out economic souls to... https://www.bitchute.com/video/25zd3oKr9b43/
Technically, it's "Reäl" / [ree - al] -- as it's pronounced for the currency of Brazil. The umlaut / diaeresis is used in the English language denote the separate pronunciation of the two adjacent vowels, such as in the word Noël. However, due to the poor grasp of the English language that most English-speakers have -- further exacerbated by being monoglots (speaking only English) and the Internet Age of unfettered dissemination of poor grammar, spelling and punctuation -- they are unaware of this rule. Case in aforementioned point: Many misuse even the most basic "to be" verb, "is" and "are", and with monotonous regularity -- e.g., "There's (There ARE) a lot of cars on the road" -- rudimentary mistakes spanning both throw-away posting in forums or by character-limited text, all the way up to public speaking, media and political leaders.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGBLH_3eIGc
https://www.bitchute.com/video/25zd3oKr9b43/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9crOACYoR8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGBLH_3eIGc
The umlaut / diaeresis is used in the English language denote the separate pronunciation of the two adjacent vowels, such as in the word Noël. However, due to the poor grasp of the English language that most English-speakers have -- further exacerbated by being monoglots (speaking only English) and the Internet Age of unfettered dissemination of poor grammar, spelling and punctuation -- they are unaware of this rule.
Case in aforementioned point: Many misuse even the most basic "to be" verb, "is" and "are", and with monotonous regularity -- e.g., "There's (There ARE) a lot of cars on the road" -- rudimentary mistakes spanning both throw-away posting in forums or by character-limited text, all the way up to public speaking, media and political leaders.
oh by the way