• ✨ ARCHIVE MODE ✨
    The forum has now been set to read-only mode, no new posts, resources, replies etc will not be possible.
    We recommend you join our Discord server to get real-time response: Discord Invite Link

Finished [Pokémon 3D] LFernando's Pokémon Lottery

Status
Not open for further replies.
*ahem*
"Another day is going by
I'm thinking about you all the time
But you're out there
And I'm here waiting

And I wrote this letter in my head
Cuz so many things were left unsaid
But now you're gone
And I can't think straight

This could be the one last chance
To make you understand

I'd do anything
Just to hold you in my arms
To try to make you laugh
Cuz somehow I can't put you in the past
I'd do anything
Just to fall asleep with you
Will you remember me?
Cuz I know
I won't forget you

Together we broke all the rules
Dreaming of dropping out of school
And leave this place
To never come back

So now maybe after all these years
If you miss me have no fear
I'll be here
I'll be waiting

This could be the one last chance to make you understand
And I just can't let you leave me once again

I'd do anything
Just to hold you in my arms
To try to make you laugh
Cuz somehow I can't put you in the past
I'd do anything
Just to fall asleep with you
Will you remember me?
Cuz I know
I won't forget you

I close my eyes
And all I see is you
I close my eyes
I try to sleep
I can't forget you
Nanana (....)
And I'd do anything for you
Nanana (....)

I'd do anything
Just to hold you in my arms
To try to make you laugh
Cuz somehow I can't put you in the past
I'd do anything
Just to fall asleep with you
Will you remember me?
Cuz I know
I won't forget you

I'd do anything
To fall asleep with you
I'd do anything
There's nothing I won't do
I'd do anything
To fall asleep with you
I'd do anything
Cuz I know
I won't forget you"

Simple Plan's "I'd Do Anything"
I'm in.
 

Tornado9797

Content Developer
P3D Developer
Global Moderator
The 6th Round of the LFernando9207's Lottery it's ended.
1. KingRoario911
2. Tornado9797
3. Duck Tard
4. jianmingyong
5. BrayBray
6. SViper
7. Gamer13
8. Fanta
9. igxx
1. Duck Tard
2. BrayBray
3. jianmingyong
4. Fanta
5. SViper
You can receive your prizes on GTS today, make sure you accept my friend request, if we are not in-game friends yet.
Make sure you have your gamejolt ID on your profile to make things happend early and faster.

Those winners for previusly rounds doesn't accept my friend Request:
1st Round - Fanta
2nd Round - Science0
4th Round - TFlip
See you next time.
What is a rainbow?

Author Donald Ahrens in his text Meteorology Today describes a rainbow as "one of the most spectacular light shows observed on earth". Indeed the traditional rainbow is sunlight spread out into its spectrum of colors and diverted to the eye of the observer by water droplets. The "bow" part of the word describes the fact that the rainbow is a group of nearly circular arcs of color all having a common center.
Where is the sun when you see a rainbow?

This is a good question to start thinking about the physical process that gives rise to a rainbow. Most people have never noticed that the sun is always behind you when you face a rainbow, and that the center of the circular arc of the rainbow is in the direction opposite to that of the sun. The rain, of course, is in the direction of the rainbow.
What makes the bow?

A question like this calls for a proper physical answer. We will discuss the formation of a rainbow by raindrops. It is a problem in optics that was first clearly discussed by Rene Descartes in 1637. An interesting historical account of this is to be found in Carl Boyer's book, The Rainbow From Myth to Mathematics. Descartes simplified the study of the rainbow by reducing it to a study of one water droplet and how it interacts with light falling upon it.
He writes:"Considering that this bow appears not only in the sky, but also in the air near us, whenever there are drops of water illuminated by the sun, as we can see in certain fountains, I readily decided that it arose only from the way in which the rays of light act on these drops and pass from them to our eyes. Further, knowing that the drops are round, as has been formerly proved, and seeing that whether they are larger or smaller, the appearance of the bow is not changed in any way, I had the idea of making a very large one, so that I could examine it better.

Descarte describes how he held up a large sphere in the sunlight and looked at the sunlight reflected in it. He wrote "I found that if the sunlight came, for example, from the part of the sky which is marked AFZ

and my eye was at the point E, when I put the globe in position BCD, its part D appeared all red, and much more brilliant than the rest of it; and that whether I approached it or receded from it, or put it on my right or my left, or even turned it round about my head, provided that the line DE always made an angle of about forty-two degrees with the line EM, which we are to think of as drawn from the center of the sun to the eye, the part D appeared always similarly red; but that as soon as I made this angle DEM even a little larger, the red color disappeared; and if I made the angle a little smaller, the color did not disappear all at once, but divided itself first as if into two parts, less brilliant, and in which I could see yellow, blue, and other colors ... When I examined more particularly, in the globe BCD, what it was which made the part D appear red, I found that it was the rays of the sun which, coming from A to B, bend on entering the water at the point B, and to pass to C, where they are reflected to D, and bending there again as they pass out of the water, proceed to the point ".

This quotation illustrates how the shape of the rainbow is explained. To simplify the analysis, consider the path of a ray of monochromatic light through a single spherical raindrop. Imagine how light is refracted as it enters the raindrop, then how it is reflected by the internal, curved, mirror-like surface of the raindrop, and finally how it is refracted as it emerges from the drop. If we then apply the results for a single raindrop to a whole collection of raindrops in the sky, we can visualize the shape of the bow.

The traditional diagram to illustrate this is shown here as adapted from Humphreys, Physics of the Air. It represents the path of one light ray incident on a water droplet from the direction SA. As the light beam enters the surface of the drop at A, it is bent (refracted) a little and strikes the inside wall of the drop at B, where it is reflected back to C. As it emerges from the drop it is refracted (bent) again into the direction CE. The angle D represents a measure of the deviation of the emergent ray from its original direction. Descartes calculated this deviation for a ray of red light to be about 180 - 42 or 138 degrees.

The ray drawn here is significant because it represents the ray that has the smallest angle of deviation of all the rays incident upon the raindrop. It is called the Descarte or rainbow ray and much of the sunlight as it is refracted and reflected through the raindrop is focused along this ray. Thus the reflected light is diffuse and weaker except near the direction of this rainbow ray. It is this concentration of rays near the minimum deviation that gives rise to the arc of rainbow.

The sun is so far away that we can, to a good approximation, assume that sunlight can be represented by a set of parallel rays all falling on the water globule and being refracted, reflected internally, and refracted again on emergence from the droplet in a manner like the figure. Descartes writes

I took my pen and made an accurate calculation of the paths of the rays which fall on the different points of a globe of water to determine at which angles, after two refractions and one or two reflections they will come to the eye, and I then found that after one reflection and two refractions there are many more rays which can be seen at an angle of from forty-one to forty-two degrees than at any smaller angle; and that there are none which can be seen at a larger angle" (the angle he is referring to is 180 - D).

A typical raindrop is spherical and therefore its effect on sunlight is symmetrical about an axis through the center of the drop and the source of light (in this case the sun). Because of this symmetry, the two-dimensional illustration of the figure serves us well and the complete picture can be visualized by rotating the two dimensional illustration about the axis of symmetry. The symmetry of the focusing effect of each drop is such that whenever we view a raindrop along the line of sight defined by the rainbow ray, we will see a bright spot of reflected/refracted sunlight. Referring to the figure, we see that the rainbow ray for red light makes an angle of 42 degrees between the direction of the incident sunlight and the line of sight. Therefore, as long as the raindrop is viewed along a line of sight that makes this angle with the direction of incident light, we will see a brightening. The rainbow is thus a circle of angular radius 42 degrees, centered on the antisolar point, as shown schematically here.

We don't see a full circle because the earth gets in the way. The lower the sun is to the horizon, the more of the circle we see -right at sunset, we would see a full semicircle of the rainbow with the top of the arch 42 degrees above the horizon. The higher the sun is in the sky, the smaller is the arch of the rainbow above the horizon.

What makes the colors in the rainbow?

The traditional description of the rainbow is that it is made up of seven colors - red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet. Actually, the rainbow is a whole continuum of colors from red to violet and even beyond the colors that the eye can see.
The colors of the rainbow arise from two basic facts:

Sunlight is made up of the whole range of colors that the eye can detect. The range of sunlight colors, when combined, looks white to the eye. This property of sunlight was first demonstrated by Sir Isaac Newton in 1666.
Light of different colors is refracted by different amounts when it passes from one medium (air, for example) into another (water or glass, for example).
Descartes and Willebrord Snell had determined how a ray of light is bent, or refracted, as it traverses regions of different densities, such as air and water. When the light paths through a raindrop are traced for red and blue light, one finds that the angle of deviation is different for the two colors because blue light is bent or refracted more than is the red light. This implies that when we see a rainbow and its band of colors we are looking at light refracted and reflected from different raindrops, some viewed at an angle of 42 degrees; some, at an angle of 40 degrees, and some in between. This is illustrated in this drawing, adapted from Johnson's Physical Meteorology. This rainbow of two colors would have a width of almost 2 degrees (about four times larger than the angular size as the full moon). Note that even though blue light is refracted more than red light in a single drop, we see the blue light on the inner part of the arc because we are looking along a different line of sight that has a smaller angle (40 degrees) for the blue.
Ana excellent laboratory exercise on the mathematics of rainbows is here, and F. K. Hwang has produced a fine Java Applet illustrating this refraction, and Nigel Greenwood has written a program that operates in MS Excel that illustrates the way the angles change as a function of the sun's angle.

What makes a double rainbow?

Sometimes we see two rainbows at once, what causes this? We have followed the path of a ray of sunlight as it enters and is reflected inside the raindrop. But not all of the energy of the ray escapes the raindrop after it is reflected once. A part of the ray is reflected again and travels along inside the drop to emerge from the drop. The rainbow we normally see is called the primary rainbow and is produced by one internal reflection; the secondary rainbow arises from two internal reflections and the rays exit the drop at an angle of 50 degrees° rather than the 42°degrees for the red primary bow. Blue light emerges at an even larger angle of 53 degrees°. his effect produces a secondary rainbow that has its colors reversed compared to the primary, as illustrated in the drawing, adapted from the Science Universe Series Sight, Light, and Color.
It is possible for light to be reflected more than twice within a raindrop, and one can calculate where the higher order rainbows might be seen; but these are never seen in normal circumstances.

Why is the sky brighter inside a rainbow?

Notice the contrast between the sky inside the arc and outside it. When one studies the refraction of sunlight on a raindrop one finds that there are many rays emerging at angles smaller than the rainbow ray, but essentially no light from single internal reflections at angles greater than this ray. Thus there is a lot of light within the bow, and very little beyond it. Because this light is a mix of all the rainbow colors, it is white. In the case of the secondary rainbow, the rainbow ray is the smallest angle and there are many rays emerging at angles greater than this one. Therefore the two bows combine to define a dark region between them - called Alexander's Dark Band, in honor of Alexander of Aphrodisias who discussed it some 1800 years ago!
What are Supernumerary Arcs?

In some rainbows, faint arcs just inside and near the top of the primary bow can be seen. These are called supernumerary arcs and were explained by Thomas Young in 1804 as arising from the interference of light along certain rays within the drop. Young's work had a profound influence on theories of the physical nature of light and his studies of the rainbow were a fundamental element of this. Young interpreted light in terms of it being a wave of some sort and that when two rays are scattered in the same direction within a raindrop, they may interfere with each other. Depending on how the rays mesh together, the interference can be constructive, in which case the rays produce a brightening, or destructive, in which case there is a reduction in brightness. This phenomenon is clearly described in Nussenzveig's article "The Theory of the Rainbow" in which he writes: "At angles very close to the rainbow angle the two paths through the droplet differ only slightly, and so the two rays interfere constructively. As the angle increases, the two rays follow paths of substantially different lengths. When the difference equals half of the wavelength, the interference is completely destructive; at still greater angles the beams reinforce again. The result is a periodic variation in the intensity of the scattered light, a series of alternately bright and dark bands."
Mikolaj and Pawel Sawicki have posted several beautiful photographs of rainbows showing these arcs.

The "purity" of the colors of the rainbow depends on the size of the raindrops. Large drops (diameters of a few millimeters) give bright rainbows with well defined colors; small droplets (diameters of about 0.01 mm) produce rainbows of overlapping colors that appear nearly white. And remember that the models that predict a rainbow arc all assume spherical shapes for raindrops.

There is never a single size for water drops in rain but a mixture of many sizes and shapes. This results in a composite rainbow. Raindrops generally don't "grow" to radii larger than about 0.5 cm without breaking up because of collisions with other raindrops, although occasionally drops a few millimeters larger in radius have been observed when there are very few drops (and so few collisions between the drops) in a rainstorm. Bill Livingston suggests: " If you are brave enough, look up during a thunder shower at the falling drops. Some may hit your eye (or glasses), but this is not fatal. You will actually see that the drops are distorted and are oscillating."

It is the surface tension of water that moulds raindrops into spherical shapes, if no other forces are acting on them. But as a drop falls in the air, the 'drag' causes a distortion in its shape, making it somewhat flattened. Deviations from a spherical shape have been measured by suspending drops in the air stream of a vertical wind tunnel (Pruppacher and Beard, 1970, and Pruppacher and Pitter, 1971). Small drops of radius less than 140 microns (0.014 cm) remain spherical, but as the size of the drop increases, the flattening becomes noticeable. For drops with a radius near 0.14 cm, the height/width ratio is 0.85. This flattening increases for larger drops.

Spherical drops produce symmetrical rainbows, but rainbows seen when the sun is near the horizon are often observed to be brighter at their sides, the vertical part, than at their top. Alistair Fraser has explained this phenomenon as resulting from the complex mixture of size and shape of the raindrops. The reflection and refraction of light from a flattened water droplet is not symmetrical. For a flattened drop, some of the rainbow ray is lost at top and bottom of the drop. Therefore, we see the rays from these flattened drops only as we view them horizontally; thus the rainbow produced by the large drops is is bright at its base. Near the top of the arc only small spherical drops produce the fainter rainbow.

What does a rainbow look like through dark glasses?

This is a "trick" question because the answer depends on whether or not your glasses are Polaroid. When light is reflected at certain angles it becomes polarized (discussed again quite well in Nussenzveig's article), and it has been found that the rainbow angle is close to that angle of reflection at which incident, unpolarized light (sunlight) is almost completely polarized. So if you look at a rainbow with Polaroid sunglasses and rotate the lenses around the line of sight, part of the rainbow will disappear!
Other Questions about the Rainbow

Humphreys (Physics of the Air, p. 478) discusses several "popular" questions about the rainbow:
"What is the rainbow's distance?" It is nearby or far away, according to where the raindrops are, extending from the closest to the farthest illuminated drops along the elements of the rainbow cone.
Why is the rainbow so frequently seen during summer and so seldom during winter?" To see a rainbow, one has to have rain and sunshine. In the winter, water droplets freeze into ice particles that do not produce a rainbow but scatter light in other very interesting patterns.
"Why are rainbows so rarely seen at noon?" Remember that the center of the rainbow's circle is opposite the sun so that it is as far below the level of the observer as the sun is above it.
"Do two people ever see the same rainbow?" Humphreys points out that "since the rainbow is a special distribution of colors (produced in a particular way) with reference to a definite point - the eye of the observer - and as no single distribution can be the same for two separate points, it follows that two observers do not, and cannot, see the same rainbow." In fact, each eye sees its own rainbow!!
Of course, a camera lens will record an image of a rainbow which can then be seen my many people! (thanks to Tom and Rachel Ludovise for pointing this out!)
"Can the same rainbow be seen by reflection as seen directly?" On the basis of the arguments given in the preceding question, bows appropriate for two different points are produced by different drops; hence, a bow seen by reflection is not the same as the one seen directly".
What are Reflection Rainbows?

A reflection rainbow is defined as one produced by the reflection of the source of incident light (usually the sun). Photographs of them are perhaps the most impressive of rainbow photographs. The reflected rainbow may be considered as a combination of two rainbows produced by sunlight coming from two different directions - one directly from the sun, the other from the reflected image of the sun. The angles are quite different and therefore the elevation of the rainbow arcs will be correspondingly different. This is illustrated in a diagram adapted from Greenler"s Rainbows, Halos, and Glories. The rainbow produced by sunlight reflected from the water is higher in the sky than is the one produced by direct sunlight.
What is a Lunar Rainbow?

A full moon is bright enough to have its light refracted by raindrops just as is the case for the sun. Moonlight is much fainter, of course, so the lunar rainbow is not nearly as bright as one produced by sunlight. Lunar rainbows have infrequently been observed since the time of Aristotle or before. A graphic description of one was writen by Dr. Mikkelson.
Rainbows and Proverbs

There is a delightful book by Humphreys entitled Weather Proverbs and Paradoxes. In it, he discusses the meteorological justifications of some proverbs associated with rainbows, such as "Rainbow at night, shepherd's delight;Rainbow in morning, shepherds take warning,"If there be a rainbow in the eve,It will rain and leave; But if there be a rainbow in the morrow It will neither lend nor borrow", and Rainbow to windward, foul fall the day; Rainbow to leeward, damp runs away."
The meteorological discussion Humphreys presents is appropriate for the northern temperate zones that have a prevailing wind, and also for a normal diurnal change in the weather.

Experiments

William Livingston, a solar astronomer who has also specialized in atmospheric optical phenomena suggests the following: "Try a hose spray yourself. As you produce a fine spray supernumeraries up to order three become nicely visible. "Try to estimate the size of these drops compared to a raindrop. ..."Another thing to try. View a water droplet on a leaf close-up - an inch from your eye. At the rainbow angle you may catch a nice bit of color!"
In Minnaert's excellent book Light and Colour in the Open Air you can find a number of experiments on how to study the nature of rainbows. Here is an illustration of one of his suggestions. Other demonstration projects are listed here .
 

LFernando9207

Pokémon Ranger
The 7th Round of the LFernando9207's Lottery it's ended.
1. Gamer13
2. SViper
3. Duck Tard
4. jianmingyong
5. KingRoario911
6. Tornado9797
7. igxx
8. BrayBray
9. Conquest
10. Ramoramapoo
1. SViper
2. Ramoramapoo
3. Duck Tard
4. igxx
5. Conquest
For the respective winners
1. 2015-04-19_18.36.44.png 2015-04-19_18.36.45.png
2. 2015-04-19_18.36.47.png 2015-04-19_18.36.48.png
3. 2015-04-19_18.36.50.png 2015-04-19_18.36.51.png
4. 2015-04-19_18.36.53.png 2015-04-19_18.36.54.png
5. 2015-04-19_18.36.55.png 2015-04-19_18.36.57.png
You can receive your prizes on GTS today, make sure you accept my friend request, if we are not in-game friends yet.
Make sure you have your gamejolt ID on your profile to make things happend early and faster.


For the players that don't accept my frinend request 'till 3 weeks after the end of the respective round. I will re-box his prize.
Those winners for previusly rounds doesn't accept my friend Request:
1st Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
2nd Round - Science0 Expire Round 10
4th Round - TFlip Expire Round 10
6th Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
See you next time.
 

SViper

Active Member
Dialga (Japanese: ディアルガ Dialga)(@jianmingyong) is a dual-type Steel/Dragon Legendary Pokémon.

It is not known to evolve into or from any other Pokémon.

Dialga is the version mascot of Pokémon Diamond, appearing on the boxart.

Along with Palkia and Giratina, it is a member of the creation trio of Sinnoh, representing time.

Biology
Dialga is a dark blue sauropod-like Pokémon with some gray metallic portions, such as its chestplate, which has a diamond in the center. It also has various light blue stripes. It has a fin-like structure on its back and a crest on its head, resembling a dinosaur. Dialga also has two horns on top of its head, two fang-like horns around its mouth, three spines on the back of its neck, long claws, and a short tail. The wing-like structure on its back can be used to focus the flow of time, as seen in Explorers of Time, Darkness, and Sky.

Dialga can warp time by either speeding it up, slowing it down, or stopping it altogether. As Dialga primarily resides in a different dimension, its behavior is nearly impossible to study. It has been shown to be very protective of its home. It also tends to have violent conflicts with its counterpart, Palkia. Dialga is the only known Pokémonthat can learn Roar of Time.

In the anime

Dialga in the anime
Major appearances
Dialga (movie)
Dialga appeared in the first three Diamond & Pearl series Pokémon movies. It was first shown in The Rise of Darkrai, where it fought with Palkia and Darkrai in a battle that nearly destroyed Alamos Town. The same Dialga appeared in Giratina and the Sky Warrior. On its return trip back to its own dimension, Dialga ended up in the Reverse World and got attacked by Giratina. The Renegade Pokémon had been angered by Dialga and Palkia's fight in the previous movie. Dialga's final movie appearance was in Arceus and the Jewel of Life. It was shown for the first time with both the other members of its trio. After being called by Sheena to stop a spatial distortion, it briefly fought with Giratina once more. Later, it returned to help Palkia and Giratina fight Arceus, and sent Sheena, Ash and his friends back in time to fix Arceus's betrayal.

Other
Dialga had a major appearance in The Battle Finale of Legend!, in the conclusion of Team Galactic's plot at Mt. Coronet. It is unknown if this is the same Dialga as that in the movies.

A Dialga is set to appear in Hoopa and the Clash of Ages, along with the other members of its trio, the Tao trio, the Eon duo, Arceus, Lugia, andRegigigas. Similar to the Dialga said above, it is unknown if this is the actual Dialga from the Movies.

Minor appearances
Dialga made its debut in A Secret Sphere of Influence! in a fantasy.

An evil Dialga made two brief appearances in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky - Beyond Time & Darkness as the protector of the Time Gear.

Dialga made a brief appearance in Meowth's fantasy in For The Love of Meowth!.
 

Tornado9797

Content Developer
P3D Developer
Global Moderator
The 7th Round of the LFernando9207's Lottery it's ended.
1. Gamer13
2. SViper
3. Duck Tard
4. jianmingyong
5. KingRoario911
6. Tornado9797
7. igxx
8. BrayBray
9. Conquest
10. Ramoramapoo
1. SViper
2. Ramoramapoo
3. Duck Tard
4. igxx
5. Conquest
You can receive your prizes on GTS today, make sure you accept my friend request, if we are not in-game friends yet.
Make sure you have your gamejolt ID on your profile to make things happend early and faster.


For the players that don't accept my frinend request 'till 3 weeks after the end of the respective round. I will re-box his prize.
Those winners for previusly rounds doesn't accept my friend Request:
1st Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
2nd Round - Science0 Expire Round 10
4th Round - TFlip Expire Round 10
6th Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
See you next time.
Random String Generator
Here are your random strings:

Wg08GpIuJe
cPG21w3BVN
UFrQzqInsA
ifwDNdWd4z
blIE0I9sgI
O9BG21VBQS
nt18LxX2aj
QG2sbq1zUB
bBSBMHDJdt
wVVXGRALN7
rmqi16q4Tc
ssI4SkPZ9Q
M7SaWfNaA6
6ayG9bLe0k
ICIsruoORe
oTg02j2jVR
4eAduHnOsC
qAQjEHOHEc
bqjc9adMt9
JKNJTGQEOp
QZK7Uad4dz
JPEHhPz776
SyRsDojRGe
FJ43ZwRyH4
BFE1wIYGFv
Kq49t8D03n
gEcHylyDXc
tnt01HEyeC
GrlphkC5wU
KL9rP4zOQm
k5LCKatbjQ
KvFdUaFzZf
skTqmx4YCu
SXA0dLlBnw
VPi1JsXqDx
ucEw1STH2n
tBGNmbRzkf
Jchwom3N01
hPiOdCZWQS
3VjLBw2Wvj
rabwiGY9ou
o2vEc7T5z3
d17thPQOOY
UBvXnODJpq
1i5FjriCei
30xkldZ9ka
W5QRQTBy42
Xen3sfZPFi
3c2RwELQhR
T4yYkIZSGA
PAcTTB0kGG
twIgu5e9ry
yjHX9GwjBV
UMvutW1odp
uVJgiKoCw3
pHUfRcwX8K
0hugQQ56RR
n8Ky6dCbGs
YuU9pd5DWS
tZw9EtGZzR
RQsVlanZXi
QpPCoa7zNp
zZ6LHvA1wB
8vXjUGzSRu
tvK5yTlEWG
Zd3BV3h5Iz
8Om7DdZFeJ
rgO7SGhx4U
pt4I4KDv4M
qTF172MgOo
qnTZb80nZx
VvK6f8S6Pm
jE7iaZgmMy
EFGTqr9XN5
8lMgjWNF5N
AKNFzvxE6p
UVmgIgGHKj
1i9A25nbyY
OfrxsE4UjB
PaNebZB5Yf
FY42WQyULY
7G1BNhYg05
WAGqNaaCZH
b9zcb9kEy7
ptwJt55A3A
oOu3iP4EJy
701uaaeb0t
l0OFSZpklP
EiE2spYfLa
6ocIAIemXT
6EIkg87Hlj
0wy1089BVp
8TFmXWcCVz
yfknuvqosu
LwR6JUdgiG
GhYVlBBFfY
dxFjsu73u6
ttmIAxS2WQ
T1issC30qq
INrYTIFw50
u3EYwLF404
Pa5LAHX7I1
5mwxFCkdjt
F33UMLZo8W
lNaAA6sDEb
sSuAXyo7JO
oHolIC2x3n
Qc4ZDunFLZ
bFknlVK3pT
Zdwef9aR29
NVZDWSt1Zy
Eysyd9ncUT
5No0b5azHn
saZdHTcoJ7
WOEZNNUSmG
HVLNw8fSkX
Wk6yA1fZ59
z03s9Wc4wu
bnSTn9w5E0
weCCTKe9ue
wlbb4e6T9N
ZfjtqqxTxe
E3aeQvrOGv
Yk0emzDy3w
cBvsJ0bMWd
cjwmpsIECz
j2Kkj7CAI5
zw60UkL81S
OBRVbQ0uez
v8EMhKdIhG
14YAuQfCZg
NsBxOFc5Uw
Grb5S8tnO3
ZDEcbhnjWW
EGE0QiSfvc
IEz0tbMxfb
nMWQQUSQNx
NSOxq0Wqwf
TJh3SLRWsR
E1NHC1s73o
WPUp0i8tmm
5zlWFN5iU7
s2dc6n5tvK
XoklXejNku
kdFJUCcnWF
xeUgGFhVc9
jKYTlU1Brp
GGFdNecXKr
NzORPxy53V
nlgu0pWNI8
xaCn3pv2BG
PX24JLeSVg
hvCv6CXdZO
IGaDWPwglc
LaGvGlYeo4
tgW3nfLbNa
vMVn6FUBcV
DiIC0Hc3PY
ENPaZiVx9q
nMs1GGmdJU
gbvoAsElmp
7z98Yaeqhk
h83wvIFkz1
0K8EHoqPex
hAkFhYLyIu
7wSFUVTnhX
xIUt1EFwoY
REHRPa1zDb
dNT1YUM8Vs
uOAx8JnycS
yz5M2MrDdZ
v9TgqqkH4P
tXN6d1fpU1
ZjfeHKTKsj
sADQKur0sL
N908thm3iD
aVKQFvXYoz
RE5oNTlp5P
FHHlbkz874
iey2A4SrN0
gmL3GLpxLj
SGTyXKYm8g
MtF3kxkUhu
N4xLa1sJ33
FHCxOMIoxE
Hn7oerhvz4
Vvf6B409an
8BN48pEiXx
ktfdzdgO0J
JFCUMU7taz
PSKj2vuuoq
Wjd0jYmpo5
n2Ll1EP20W
eAOQiK9Ncq
yKt1fpOgDl
5mvOMlg57H
ioIiO7BebK
RmlzlFIQL4
NXw9eAu32O
wNJ1CQxUFb
EylmlonCD6
iucf0kAHV8
jRzb62fshk
QtR0vOu1nn
3I3UiwbEoy
qaolUCQCBQ
m89y4nPGEI
kLe9zfk0Cd
tMsAOEG7QP
S8y628Bl4L
4NJTatvpSu
5IbgaPO9Om
TuRQH75dcE
OYZz4ReSr1
9IaxtdU0aH
T5jt2mmfMk
BJQ9BQIyrj
ZnrHUhJcz7
xLJS8j2VOI
UuvnAv1dRe
O8XyI0sAxp
GL8efnDKNO
JvgxWW5rBf
Vva2tjTAzi
nwlqwrduXe
l5tDVvgut2
SBb4p42Osj
NQgps4srik
6fXwWdzGNt
NuFhDKAmds
C7xJYDvR0z
KEm5AnRJxt
RhwIYyrV2X
RcthFFLyri
XBK6wux0TX
BWZIfyzuvU
oNqvIBlV1p
LnxW6f6b4r
JxzPdnBMK8
Y4FT173cK8
3UDaWmzOie
2slTt7gTYw
bdRFVPr4ZI
jQt6ChN9MT
PNJ3czKWRm
t2EhxfErph
VyeBIUdXZQ
n4jlh5xW5c
wGwaGAY8Up
ptgQjz3Cn2
DwWokA0frO
p7vPkPYb8y
yPbVfUbWnJ
5PZBlzaCOP
4mmX2Qk4Gg
YgN6ljWCBo
b0Oic3CHn8
mdZhps2FEf
bAnq7fZoQT
EsVPRhuqYG
I3HFEC2E5A
KGrnKjUUpU
BSL2yOi6g6
SzzCRVzedH
nY2BszEX5F
8Ykoct4QeB
sJj9DDnxKl
kF4JxlrqFM
dPV1JbpIay
fPsDwQd1dN
6ZpDmbNicY
O2bNmbO1Ia
UcON9DKugA
QTj5IJd9Qc
7r7Np4BigH
gznuuijhgF
RzF5AKtr6w
32sqL1chgh
Yxxvz4HXaS
xsMgykniWl
rlErqqcNVY
NDWAKLZO28
PyxfMNLy7A
O331NUQOdJ
vaotFuH8cO
ivIgfDsOpa
SQjD4CkZB3
vXmOJlhQYQ
pOSSSdkSoP
ucPaWY2UFG
nt6YaNUJhP
8cRnRUtAnO
9BSVFyz2Pn
JZTmyzT4bg
PLSiOjocAi
wvUsWuMUVH
66FSvcy4F6
XrnmtiqT5w
0PyUjifzLH
0GFyKBWgLj
hRWjNWP537
OyGYCCPKmj
3pa3HXUdoX
ApF3zwUxn5
rjitCr9yP1
Whuv7kMbtb
W6kub8FNZ1
gx4jsmj8Pd
TeiHAfrvnE
P7x0NTCR8Z
MOnoMBAnVO
AM1Ey1ikE9
lJL9Zd3xGA
nf1aG2o358
PFixDcswyN
tNRsMsyiQA
ij4XCHVdtV
WcC674H4jr
JFPZ3D6keG
z6eAtEAOUj
Blc5YTYyyX
C3jPqkZwVe
W26F5Kh0XZ
DKKRlxOflt
L7RwalkRIT
YEzEap8173
esqrtbAKo8
dQwNq9Vtb0
uP8xnedBHp
EAPSrYWHsz
5sJjyrNZA1
PCI5bncjzJ
9CglLSRN4H
58foyZXkhj
13kmIWxx3c
3CRmGFXr9B
6yrCFdw5bV
8Sf45i3rwY
YLRB9hkZBx
Au1E4nX0Do
U9iJuUjlcA
XxaVEzhZD8
Eqw2xcPySr
I0TMOYQqAc
Nnk1LeZpxU
vb7kFtsIrb
DT9zGKDR9g
zRp8U2sX17
uXsK8EOuhv
0z3zpzP1g1
XDWUJESbUK
YBnsolZ2gw
azoAeBvYZG
hlHaviKpuU
kWlByez8gc
VSNvuTprbO
0DjKNxOvMD
CRkQJbaaBe
K5uwDozCn2
9thNNXt7nM
yZdBNOBL9e
hWGGbEcEdS
GTMeZLEtab
PwXOHAS89z
z9Io0OgtUe
90QQ2SVqfq
auSm8sRO2L
RZfflYXkDC
xvFKi14zAm
IqM0Q1vZpV
1LTLB4b7PX
Da8qSgO7O8
bmeSqkMTOD
4BY5z3Za2I
pIRmFCkef4
MCyWozIN5J
4kpphbeOg0
FVBigzNVHX
8KQApPypmf
Y6e4dmUhcQ
13I6JVOKcu
6nSr6CM7oK
tfyGvDR5t5
BKXYqDnP2j
SCgK6Dz0ZU
VbKvF2TAw6
ItquTLfZQX
FEgSJyma4u
Zj51eP8SmS
uLldEw2Zht
lskPKryksh
cZRAYajiEx
HIxl6cfS2n
7IzhSSh5Op
2YdVXpeJH2
54kQry53Aj
w8lzmLmJSn
5GJ4AO8kLe
RV0smtrZQT
yA0hfqV5Um
FLzi1JQBbH
60dWFVgw53
wvjfwjgS3U
YPP8iUqESi
WPZK7ugymW
sty9AK0zfH
6wSk88sGYi
mGVIj4pPTn
K3Dn3cpN9e
He8M80bbW5
SoAQebm3kk
X7fVSAXun3
rrmmKnOhau
CYMcg3usky
f9jmUOM19S
4JQL8axbrW
vI7dx3RTUL
NCig6C1gpg
B935wxsawX
M8ZcMTuBCa
5EFDlufH9B
Dn37PUPEgv
E5Ryc598a9
sf65SmiLqe
HuoZJ2WPvA
cD2rEW0T0O
237h4BlvrA
lfgk32o5cb
jGp7x5SsjM
tDfoYyP51U
9PppCsJn0u
4LIv4ESbnE
w2yGIyB3l2
I1DCA9MNkt
oU9RSEifgX
dehSigVopH
bSFZ2YrCgg
3vFMfbEdhl
mvkfvxRl6S
lcliKrxHa7
2r52tEFcmt
pGVvmLYsWo
uiZVV9cIiX
wCK2s34knc
R2VvGXqUTL
lwNSgGJ9L1
Z4ECYWEVs1
oouosSCH01
FNfiIVULVs
Mbr1fKSl4G
kqb5Sz0uxs
nLPfE18tmo
91cBTmyeHK
OJ2Dx5crmI
QxJhdDJGMH
UymHsPNbw0
2wJLUPvtUC
KzUVvACsxq
ORZ2gdvBCl
6dd0s16sKr
IMLtyCSOjZ
RkMTtxcCM4
45rFKuvDk8
utAonXVhFY
dcgHGqs76a
SNlLaUVvvq
Xe1ZuTwbGl
fxoT0ZodL0
xgTgg8ouNZ
oWryfv9r21
l822Y9IyYl
bnsrMzNzPI
w7VyuXiUDq
xVSq5ROdO9
W22NBRJTI1
CMyjWmYfJb
UC3rPSF4xC
WYtGoMuJuY
sNcXkNEjBW
CSpGTwr0EW
YCcxqf2021
osykQ7l5qW
jpkzLblAQ3
GAv2XKgqF4
kCLBT7foUe
emtXryfaBD
mhapf9iOPQ
Sitb2yVQiP
X5P5xJUMFs
J4uRHqsLte
gnqJnQnOFi
ishzWKCVfH
iAobcydmqV
oKX001LjhG
MiIaGy1FdS
zgMqAqN2KO
ewRSKMyCtV
hpYLyQoaul
2UFgjbM2wA
uzVtqVzcfh
FRYuCArzp4
gZn61GcS93
cH8rlDbCW5
gKueQ7fxVy
Nvw1lDCFFj
jQ2kKTbl3N
EeyFvln0KV
i54uh0MBAc
tKupplnanB
l2ZfzwTq7U
Et7ki0rOOx
gyYSPrZlnS
jJrmu8FkpF
sjgtjKqvJl
z7HMyHQSV4
L05ROpV0o7
phNq5gVgHz
0tYKHmadu8
LWd4NkSg3h
GcDWRD5o89
rI2qUOMxHi
QJZNM6lAGe
ljtZldlYNa
HULVlFBl3r
U15zOWcaFk
b6lIkkaZIp
wkKvBvoPa6
BpMQKyrkUG
tBIsfK3Xwq
IIxebk3WiF
AKlr7VmKhS
WEx6O0DveM
T6sigUw9Pr
osT5x1GY7p
YkzAD6iW6O
o52wiE6Gz8
ToI1kwWpUy
3TXHKH8Pfk
oiEuG45c5e
IGuJiaTLph
lI4QHm0FC6
259d6ybOhb
v2GnYiig40
7gvQ4rHQBM
IFoaUt57Io
DlBONEn0sl
8ECfKLnbds
4Fx8cXVMAi
G9ikogLBjC
YP0XmQXaMi
lAhdGe10Ck
eBsS8Y1PC4
epd7V9lpXF
fNy5VNPZKF
vx2VWqqSTR
4aW40M4S4C
7fBUaWMhFX
Ymak4eJaiQ
rU20bPjpIf
m7EQ4X8jd1
mKK9mcexsL
DwXmNeRwBo
xGkA8rQvMc
0zD38j7mV9
l0jqDzhNNH
EDMa0m1Tcg
NyrKX7TlZS
MkYVQeYYg3
kJhoPydE19
2he0eM0pCT
UubBj1g8z2
E0usZeL5Is
G6SIYORKKB
KIJMDmOrQh
KkSzWjH5uU
Dtg9rStTUF
ySkBNpltF2
XOgmLWjaM5
TWSLc8YLs0
ZBJMMpiO7M
ShfoyUzB9j
isNjyTjAnj
OkcP6GLJIi
DI8jlNwIcF
aRjO2mamGd
I2MyK7v55T
ZJQOxTdeV9
q1CLpevBJB
0OIPrvIN03
ZmFd8WNf5W
twI1EHeGJf
DeTdgYVs6o
6lzQ1m4O5x
UoBstGmEYu
FDxkXFOvKf
KbWHbmEJt6
d8E4RsJQZw
gJDQOgeaN5
OUWmzsfnE5
PqObQEkGaJ
BHGL7PI3R4
9IaLFUuNbd
FdRuH6qnAl
oFiMOj3vwH
sRtVFDPYNn
aztjfBTvH8
qn3h7up0go
qSXKqzH9jw
pARn66EtT0
PlfBcT4cxJ
56WYus4CiE
ugQPwWYa2Y
U3XocwRBeB
6wDwdmRRsv
InQo6EeTKR
R9x11ODyEt
BxHfrzFCUc
4WJRR0Sxs3
16JYxYhCNX
MegLssfB4y
YP6jJw7sIT
8vnKtevFNt
enu68P6VRl
4ClnCcqfcw
OIP6LkxKYq
L0GIM542fq
92E81opC1O
JTjd8SobGV
ooOhnTsDds
jabjR1Dwvq
Rm2oarOxF9
QicXYzB8RF
kdCMKCbSTo
8FX2XuBmmh
wJpvFg8lBT
UiU8IzgtXv
8XoaS3uhEV
pGNAIaD5hA
vJhuF26Fft
YQg7zWeLyZ
58cTlnZ2On
rWSjttnP1g
Mn7GkIg25y
bXMJE0noAd
BXSeGNHXwn
Xx2HoF2pxf
ewJzfYXgoG
JBgdVwFfMc
cF1kjjqUIQ
muB6vKwfE9
vqzkwItp5h
KirsWpZ5xK
DdBD0gibK0
nhX1SHgn7R
L1wEBUdiRj
upmR71k1NO
nljGqIoS2y
qBjWsLXJ4s
teOwbAfoF1
P5vQQnJ4gJ
6X2W6MfQAd
xgB5GkTGhT
d0c0Ga4vwv
Pcc9dszvMF
TN1xQ0RF5G
jaGXoIbuSE
WNjsf1kSaD
OP1IG7hlBZ
50yIL4EMg1
fJnSMEctgy
n8W6bOt4ca
HIt5ukBdoY
GgVMyyyIwI
bxIhDH2DfC
GO1dSnP498
SJ3Ss1UL3X
DypxFsIBrA
20gwPuQUQM
7XeOPkjcBp
cuSZTfm46i
BDZfRaxFpD
czdCgLYDJU
CG100wu9MD
KHzJeauD6Y
pb8usqYgTM
AsTnT8URuO
WColjPTFNq
LGMiqa1owW
fFHewjzLPb
rM3W9Ir1kN
ojiqsTMS10
o4oW3uocD4
Tsi6lCAc2b
7QYhNI4U5B
ebXIk4fx4v
5bX7TPGfCK
CVW3zI7E23
xDTWgqGLqA
uV0n1E6cye
5juqZyoy7a
84ao5OoKF7
xxua4xgs8E
scS6kTST4f
8ww5O4DEsE
kHRqWf2MVN
Ygrhfzrpxx
Ux6oz0wLkX
uxtRkU5IUY
hHpCJFBcMF
hNTcfG7c0t
yS3G6hkOnN
ZnIXfOLZL5
GvRkoQzUOT
vXHWnwnDuM
FcGh3z2mQD
8HedLYwdpV
XDFtzW4RwC
CuveAFuIBQ
Q0vySrJRXN
bABrWsFPtQ
VnWFPQI63i
CiRxaZSWme
KASbypTbFK
eY2w3DZBn3
LzvHHdlnuR
qfpU5IUIIy
23aENBL4Pc
1gD0ih0Bb3
tosUnoXJZw
OdoQYgxIqr
cKFCJu8c5o
oTIfY9aOOE
iYlK7H5kyX
C8wC09qIVC
mQGLrj8iHv
95zCnFRmRb
BcW5UwwWgN
kjAn3KZwY5
OfvEZHCVjd
qpY0p2ZpxC
behQzBMLhi
xm30Oic1gP
Oav1q8fVki
wabi9rzl3Z
v1pZNJxrR5
M7nmCWeKsE
b8mXkaMlfT
rDAdglNkAY
pUO48mDE8J
1D20bsA9rb
FO8RzIcKRW
wsUTxZmKea
yY0Cb0AW1R
UGZI06xBFx
BSucg9ozUE
i8vwC1vhVK
1EZTS8cv0g
748ggCeLdJ
C4ODds8Lb7
EO35nZDpvK
WHg923FghI
56nTQje9IF
wrvp1lzyKG
2uOEqsHEpd
qDlYj4zSDa
KMte2Fu3p0
ZCF5C5YP5J
mYOYGY6VGZ
0B3GUXufnm
V72wLK0Vrh
1emq1Pq0LK
yU8JTw9K9t
2K62BjjKeq
BjJGrvQacL
XhrFnE1kh8
NQVNE6F8HA
4odERW9yc9
19RibjOGRu
Tr8cnNDjIY
4SR2FDaUo3
KSgWd0ZJyG
MMrFMNLNIk
xH4NBW6NoJ
VXSgyiiZP8
aQeYayKZAf
vtP2kQZTyb
XcyKJB1vob
JzCKta6gsH
7DSMpbe7JS
zNbimRdoAz
Kjzm6zWjRI
RNq8Vw560K
WXzk32knq0
24kFtpvtJY
LSwCcpCEIX
3kmIkqB7bO
PtqnVFLuzQ
dAVVQwM9Mc
jWk19p7Nmf
86FeH111ae
62dlRYbNK6
3JAfoyNHaH
EZGj3UHzql
udyWtNI0xG
mmOe8aE1kq
6UtQxlieXe
vhhGYqaBXE
MKyi3tV80x
Fpzl8amvCU
Jqsh4wnte2
MLTLXfFDOO
Hu7453WIpM
nVDmas0Igl
fORQOTp0TR
xx81tHGhZq
gVRaaNdjC5
ejiEFKkqoQ
jIHc1CuXEh
uxUGIyC9t0
1mJ4aBhJ5T
sSQ4UCZmlk
2REt9w090n
dTmPXmxdbI
AMzmbBV95n
i4NGa8QKva
iftdUCqoDE
ldVK5jjrVa
fNXsCAgOyl
SJThqQ0ug4
PwaFY8cu3R
XL9IKKND9m
OKpyUnNUQt
ZfzPTyHy4e
dnf00E4Ctp
lF5wtQ9HW3
ITRLVEVZLq
vRiFgBp3K8
7gBFz47LYR
4j54UbQvZ8
nAZNFwuQM1
LBfP1CHGmK
arpcSuJrpY
eO93xyDAni
6O3cBKBzPE
NzlaNamFEH
39DXrrLiPq
sWtPvfdJc3
lNE9uff1y4
4Q73C4BTkr
jjqnfoRUmX
Nw7EzjHmlv
LrE7TYqVSN
qXPx0PREXR
G54ZVBUs8v
KZvYQFFeOs
lSmG2GmhEa
MKw9Ji4WWL
YRAPLNzSSq
2NA2M7sGZh
pISAepzitB
hnngtKd2BX
1Lq3kU56P9
dtotitQuLx
kDZVFmfa13
kZR5e0hAYT
NhPPLn4xV9
lTZuyxieOJ
HWYtnax0jz
iVoVsV3LwN
tODvFVwsws
jG5fj9x587
Zd6XMYgmMt
IbF2JYIknI
0rK2164a9q
4iiAi2DLLq
f7zpsvq7va
5DugKuBkF8
QPFnnbXIzI
UwM4qmmX2I
m4HduozoCP
QvG0AHzsa4
82hVoYJZcq
SZCacplunR
uKc9e1O3TQ
lOY5KnyUMe
ZTEJumTQfC
n7sGduAut9
QWAUZX5nK2
DF7NcADANM
boZfuC19Jf
0H4z6CDXJv
upjWs5VDwc
K6VWe73jiW
dCl2G1PV0N
MvLQ30fcyc
vth6s2F3NW
U0euk7AKx3
OFckTX0c1R
naX1xvSxOB
yLwKhh4sH2
QMl9I074Xl
mtDQAK5ngB
0M70ip3e4k
SmdmhYDGTK
fdodROp2Rk
fgkrt9MpsA
Yd3grDQaTM
ncN5Ew7jQh
5UsRauPVur
QtFgr6C8m8
XVOnOZz4mm
JUy6E2cq9l
9OXsqqvcrh
JuBRB1WkGc
oh1D0ii3lr
AcF3L3DOiD
aGCE214vNb
0ZaUGcmWJh
mJzKQ30Td3
VYcCKN1qLi
imASMqNI2Z
d3CmIN6USu
C8MIGCleTz
PXWj3Y20cU
evKugnTFOD
Eu1PSvaHVg
zl7tADdo7i
BBvb1rqA8c
hDU9yFl5kk
JNLGGERcpz
9tAVVkpQnx
HRHBSqxDHu
7MCnrZgqwc
eQAGlD23Ti
ZlgRnpGipk
RykDfsBh7X
DDGvhMwAST
HMJjXtj8ex
yaDJgRfnSO
Tybj8PKSHZ
6Qs64skjKk
4y3dqJGthE
UA0m79AKjP
pu4uI7un7s
nuU2zjbMRE
aZ97cEvUaN
AVmF01eC1R
glm8iAlZLc
wJgwAcCls6
TGzEnHOoSj
PbnleaWgPN
cCK96YHmw9
uvBddaXwRB
LZ88H5ZnJu
ZTAXA7sk4W
Psrj51YpHW
5SwjrsCczE
kzLk8nO5OY
SIXF1m4EVn
CIUGgvnDpP
QlrQefdR6G
1EBQHKbvB9
yGgkTzpItM
JNXrYZBAA3
GyCUx868ZF
UDrTojsI2j
lVxCfaKyfi
qDnvUWl2OU
21zfbnxlJ8
oRC6VEyRQZ
1KhIt2QZdh
MlS6QwE76a
JbY2E4fATA
oQDWOwgc0B
jEEOmJz7Wp
DB4ilsTL7I
OL1fKtyVbG
nVcjw551cC
0JnibEAjn8
TuEvZtkxUj
Xe3Xwdlr7H
hJqLCquDty
51DZAipugD
avKmhUD4Nl
QwLGJ9yegf
YK8BeQ2bPV
mBuX6FkWnm
LsTUphUJbW
Uy9hF1GeNX
HRnXyFIk5c
tVo00ZJF4z
DyV6hC93fJ
EjbTrLBeNn
3LvyPVfQ5z
MEr6HMmbAo
3njMeCjm9f
oRs5baLM9N
FYn626LnnS
eoN9Wsv6xC
1vsOQJLuqS
 

LFernando9207

Pokémon Ranger
The 8th Round of the LFernando9207's Lottery it's ended.
1. Gamer13
2. SViper
3. Tornado9797
4. KingRoario911
5. Duck Tard
6. MekaX
1. Duck Tard
2. KingRoario911
3. SViper
4. Gamer13
5. Tornado9797
For the respective winners
1. 2015-04-26_21.44.15.png 2015-04-26_21.44.17.png
2. 2015-04-26_21.44.18.png 2015-04-26_21.44.19.png
3. 2015-04-26_21.54.32.png 2015-04-26_21.54.26.png
4. 2015-04-26_21.44.21.png 2015-04-26_21.44.22.png
5. 2015-04-26_21.44.57.png 2015-04-26_21.44.58.png
You can receive your prizes on GTS today, make sure you accept my friend request, if we are not in-game friends yet.
Make sure you have your gamejolt ID on your profile to make things happend early and faster.


For the players that don´t accept my frinend request 'till 3 weeks after the end of the respective round. I will re-box his prizes.
Those winners for previusly rounds doesn't accept my friend Request:
1st Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
2nd Round - Science0 Expire Round 10
4th Round - TFlip Expire Round 10
6th Round - Fanta Expire Round 10
See you next time.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top