Oriandu

Engaged Member
Sep 1, 2017
3,359
6,135
700
2 months with fever? That is something new, a world record indeed
Recently I had a six week long sinus cold. I had zero other symptoms except for sinus congestion. A friend of mine once had diarrhea for a solid month. My cousin got covid in 2021 and hasn't been able to smell anything for nearly four years. Who are you to question illness and disease? Especially if payments have been paused during that time of sickness.
 

GODZILLA2000

Newbie
Dec 9, 2017
86
78
212
Covid was a hoax.
Yeah. That's the biggest lie I've read on the internet. Working at retail in Winter really sucks because every sick douchebag that can't stay home just coughs around you. I felt like death the first few days, and for 2 weeks, couldn't smell or taste anything. It's a blessing and a curse because anything I ate tasted the same, but at least I didn't have to smell skunk weed. Idk who's genius idea it was to make weed that smells like a pile of dead people, but I hope that person gets every kind of cancer imaginable.
 

marvelfreak3000

Active Member
Sep 27, 2023
919
902
217
I hope we get more Sophia soon there hasn't been anything for her in a while even if you didn't have the threesome with her and Eva.
 

Miranha157

Active Member
Oct 6, 2024
628
868
162
I don't speak English but I wanted to ask a question, the direct translation of "tenant" and "landlady" means that the
tenant = is the person who rents a house, in this case he pays to live in it
landlady = is the person who is renting, in this case she receives from the person who rented it

In the original meaning of the "English" language would it be like this? Because it sounds very strange to call it "my landlady"
 

Adhdclassic

Forum Fanatic
Mar 10, 2024
5,318
8,275
649
I don't speak English but I wanted to ask a question, the direct translation of "tenant" and "landlady" means that the
tenant = is the person who rents a house, in this case he pays to live in it
landlady = is the person who is renting, in this case she receives from the person who rented it

In the original meaning of the "English" language would it be like this? Because it sounds very strange to call it "my landlady"
That's the real meaning. But game meaning
Landlady-mother
Tenant-child
Only thing I came up with understanding it. Mother was pregnant with child. So mother(landlady) carried for 9 months(housed)child(tenant)
 

Miranha157

Active Member
Oct 6, 2024
628
868
162
That's the real meaning. But game meaning
Landlady-mother
Tenant-child
Only thing I came up with understanding it. Mother was pregnant with child. So mother(landlady) carried for 9 months(housed)child(tenant)
It's weird when the MC calls "Eva" a landlady, because in that case she would be more like a friend of Nora or an aunt to the mc.

Nora, for example, the translation of maid = domestic worker, the one who cleans the house, cooks... The MC calls her "my domestic worker". I don't know, the meaning is very strange.
 

PhineasFlynn

Forum Fanatic
Feb 1, 2020
5,696
7,841
738
It's weird when the MC calls "Eva" a landlady, because in that case she would be more like a friend of Nora or an aunt to the mc.

Nora, for example, the translation of maid = domestic worker, the one who cleans the house, cooks... The MC calls her "my domestic worker". I don't know, the meaning is very strange.
It's a common term that gets around incest rules on sites like Patreon. Just like Adhdclassic wrote
Landlady - mother
Tenant - son
(Rommate - sister)
(Neigbour - aunt)

There are a few games where the non-relationships are so complicated that it's mind-boggling. For example, "cousin" is described as "my grandmother's friend's neighbor's tenant."
 
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