The battle of the Vampires (14 Viewers)

Lilith

Immortelle
May 19, 2006
6,719
I was just gonna post something I figured out here but then if I play again in the future I will give myself a disadvantage so I will keep my mouth shut. :p

Next time I decide to play I'll be ready for you guys. This time I had to ask too many questions because I wasn't sure about the rules etc. and had to keep asking people on the side.
 

Buy on AliExpress.com

Fred

Senior Member
Oct 2, 2003
41,113
You were great for a first timer btw, we've seen many people screwing up the first time. You saw past my bullshit from day 1, and for that i hope i don't go against you again :D
 

Gabriel

Killed By Death
May 23, 2010
10,608
At least Risa supported my crusade against Fred.Too bad I died so quick and in a day I wasn't here, by the time I made it back the game was already almost over.
 

Lilith

Immortelle
May 19, 2006
6,719
You can at least describe them to us if you're not showing them.
No problem:

Women’s breasts are made up of fat, nipple, glands (alveoli) and a network of ducts through which milk can pass from the glands to the nipples.
Each breast contains between 15 and 20 sections called lobes, each of which is composed of many smaller structures known as glands or alveoli. These alveoli produce milk. A system of small tubes known as ducts transports milk from the alveoli to a big central duct that has multiple openings in the nipple. A central duct opens into the nipple from each lobe.
A band of muscle surrounds each gland. This band can contract (squeeze), forcing the milk out of the glands, into the ducts and through to pools that lie beneath the areola, the brown circle that surrounds the nipple. Eventually, a sucking baby extracts the milk by pressing and pumping it out from these pools through the nipple.
The spaces around the lobes and ducts are filled with fatty tissue and ligaments. The size of a non-lactating breast is largely determined by the amount of fat it contains as the gland structure is not that well developed.
Underneath the breasts there is fibrous tissue and muscle separating them from the ribs. There is no actual muscle in the breast, but the pectoral muscle passes underneath the breast and connects the chest and the arm. Lying further below the pectoral muscle are the ribs which are connected by intercostal muscles, which raise and lower the rib cage when breathing in and out.
Deep beyond the ribs is the pleural lining, a thin, moist membrane that lines the chest cavity.



Hope that was insightful. :smile:
 

LowLife

Senior Member
Jan 7, 2011
4,967
I fucked up in the TWW whacking. I actually thought that TWW was the detective before you guys went for him, then when Hoori and Sabet started going after TWW, i thought it was all a ploy so that Sabet will use her final power, so we won't recruit her and so that you'd throw us off whacking Matt because he's the detective. But i guess i overestimated you simpleton fucks! :D

No but seriously, DVS and Klin were great in this game. The C's deserved this easy victory, a few fuck ups and miscalculations cost us very dearly. As soon as i fucked up the TWW thing, i kinda lost hope, and let Jasper take all the decisions from there.
From bad to worse!
 

Nzoric

Grazie Mirko
Jan 16, 2011
37,868
No problem:

Women’s breasts are made up of fat, nipple, glands (alveoli) and a network of ducts through which milk can pass from the glands to the nipples.
Each breast contains between 15 and 20 sections called lobes, each of which is composed of many smaller structures known as glands or alveoli. These alveoli produce milk. A system of small tubes known as ducts transports milk from the alveoli to a big central duct that has multiple openings in the nipple. A central duct opens into the nipple from each lobe.
A band of muscle surrounds each gland. This band can contract (squeeze), forcing the milk out of the glands, into the ducts and through to pools that lie beneath the areola, the brown circle that surrounds the nipple. Eventually, a sucking baby extracts the milk by pressing and pumping it out from these pools through the nipple.
The spaces around the lobes and ducts are filled with fatty tissue and ligaments. The size of a non-lactating breast is largely determined by the amount of fat it contains as the gland structure is not that well developed.
Underneath the breasts there is fibrous tissue and muscle separating them from the ribs. There is no actual muscle in the breast, but the pectoral muscle passes underneath the breast and connects the chest and the arm. Lying further below the pectoral muscle are the ribs which are connected by intercostal muscles, which raise and lower the rib cage when breathing in and out.
Deep beyond the ribs is the pleural lining, a thin, moist membrane that lines the chest cavity.



Hope that was insightful. :smile:
Why was reading this a major turn on for me?
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 14)