I've been a gamer since Commodore 64 / Amiga 500 / Nintendo 8Bit, and I would have to agree with you on that. It's a phenomenal game. And it's better than ever now. The graphics updates and fluidity make the place more magical and fun than ever now. But I'm glad I'm not as caught up in the game as I was back in 2005-2007, when I struggled to even leave the house and hold down a job, haha. That time is long gone, thank fuck, so now I just log in and play whenever time permits it. Let me know if you start playing on the EU public servers in the future!
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Well, basically, cause I need a certain income. Plus that we need more time spent together and we also need to get married. There's a bunch of stuff that needs to be in place.
Colombia, what can I say, it's a land of extremes. On the one hand it's a country going through a phase of rapid development and modernization, but on the other there's quite a lot of poverty, corruption etc. The cities I visited (particularly Cartagena and Barranquilla) are becoming very good tourist spots. Cartagena de Indias has been like that for years now, but it's an ongoing thing. For instance, some of the malls there put the malls in my own country to shame, and I can say the same about the cinemas. There are many nice restaurants, bars, nightclubs and beaches (the best beaches, however, is located on the islands just off the coast).
Colombians are the most service-minded people ever I've come across. Here, for instance, I feel vendors generally give you as little as possible whenever you buy something. Expensive, with little in return. It's the opposite there. One time I ordered a milkshake, started drinking it inside the place, and when the woman behind the counter got a glimpse of me and noticed that I had finished my milkshake, she came running after me with the thingy she made it with, and poured more in my cup, cause there was more. Another example is the buses. In my country, if you're 2 seconds late for the bus, and even though you're physically there outside of the bus, the busdriver will just shake his head (aka give you the finger) and drive away, cause you were 2 seconds late. Over there, you don't even have to stand on a bus stop. Buses chase
you 
Maybe these two examples are lame, but it's just two things I remember very well. There were many other times when the service-mindedness of the culture there struck me as sublime.
It was an adventure. Great climate, palm trees, hammocks, beaches, weird animals, getting wasted / partying, great food and wonderful people.
The scariest part: Traffic! Those people do not know how to drive. Never got so scared in my life.
Currently missing the most: Juan Valdez coffee
Oh, and my girl of course.
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Btw, Serie-A is pretty big over there! Not as big as La Liga, but I saw close to a 100 people wearing jerseys of Serie-A teams (compared to about 5-10 wearing EPL jerseys), and I was there for an entire month, in 3 different cities. In total I saw 4 Juve fans, about 10 Inter, a couple of Napoli- and Roma fans, and the rest were Milan fans (must have been like 60-70 people I saw with that awful red and black jersey).
Nothing compares to Real Madrid, though. Barcelona, too, but Real Madrid is seriously a national pastime over there. I'm not kidding when I say that 1 in 5 people wear the famous all white strip, you see it on absolutely every street.
Very little Falcao fapping going on over there. It was all James, James, James, wherever you turned, whether in sports stores, electronic stores, ordinary grocery stores, buses, you name it.
Got to see all Juve games on TV. Serie-A is high priority on the latinamerican versions of ESPN and FOX, which is on normal cable television.