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Click here to watch the latest ranked matches !
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Free for all Deathmatch mode. Kill as many enemies as you can and try do die as little as possible. Dont team in this mode. Its all vs all!
1 versus 1 ranked mode. You get matched against another player in a 1 versus 1 battle. Both players have 5 lives. First player who dies 5 times, loses. Winner wins elo points and loser loses elo points.
| Score | 200 | Members | 2 |
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Penguin
Midday: an account of a conversation that reroutes her future. A stranger on a train mentions the word “orphaned” and she thinks briefly of abandoned drafts and ideas she left on the sidewalk of her mind. She catalogs the feeling: a sudden curious tenderness for things that have been discarded. The entry turns into a long, slow sentence about salvage — how she would learn to repurpose grief into architecture, to build rooms in herself to keep the lost warm.
Evening: a letter she will never send. It contains precise accusations and the soft scaffoldings of apology. It ends not in closure but in the audacity of continued curiosity: Tell me what happened to you while I wasn’t looking. The answer, as always, is partial and beautiful. anushkadiariess exclusive new
She arrives like a rumor — small at first, a spark in the corner of the room that insists you look up. Anushka’s notebooks are not diaries in the polite, bridal-shower sense; they are compasses for those who’ve learned the hard way that maps lie. “Exclusive” is less a brand and more a promise: the journals collect the private geometry of a life that refuses simplification — micro-epiphanies, misreadings that turned into strategy, and the soft sabotage of everyday expectations. Midday: an account of a conversation that reroutes
What makes Anushka Diaries exclusive is its refusal to privatize the work of becoming: instead of hiding, it limns the scaffolding — the false starts, the private experiments, the small ethical compromises and the plans to undo them. “New” matters less as novelty and more as permission: permission to fail conspicuously and to iterate. The entry turns into a long, slow sentence
Morning pages: the city still yawning, a cup cooling beside a sentence that starts: I will not apologize today. The paragraph refuses to be pretty; it lists what went unsaid last year, the small betrayals that stacked like unpaid bills, the tender, ridiculous things she does to be kinder to strangers than to herself. There’s a diagram — angry, elegant — showing how forgiveness leaks through pride like light through a cracked pane.
Afternoon: micro-essays on ambition, written as grocery lists. Each item is a small promise: buy cheaper coffee, write longer sentences, stop waiting for permission to be loud. Lines between errands and revelations blur. There’s a raw, almost tactical energy here; these lists act less as to-dos and more as rituals to wake the nerve.
Read alone, this collection is a mirror that misbehaves: it shows you angles of yourself you pretended not to see. Read with a friend, it becomes an act of conspiracy — an agreement to witness each other’s stumbles without cataloguing them as character defects. The pieces insist that intimacy is not clarity; it’s tolerance for contradiction.