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MrFluffy02

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Everything posted by MrFluffy02

  1. Reserved
  2. +1 PD/SD don't give new members of their faction heavy automatic weapons. That's earned with time and proving you can uphold high LEO faction RP standards.
  3. This is so far from the topic of this discussion thread. How would cops paying for their own equiptment reduce fights/shootouts? How would it make them fear for their life any more than if they didn't have to purchase equiptment. PD/SD would be held to the same fear-rp standard either way. Nevermind the fact that it's completly unrealistic for any cop to pay for their own service weapon, rifle and body armor. Go tell your local or state police officer that they should pay for their own gear and ammo, then update us on their reaction. What you're really concerned about is crims losing their guns because they decided to get into a shootout. Nobody forced them to do that, it's the RP they chose. PD/SD don't hand heavy automatic weaponry to new/untrained deputies/officers. Why should low tier gangs/unaffiliated criminals have access to heavies either. Prove you're able to roleplay sufficently before you can begin to have the ability to wreak havoc in the game. Let's start holding criminals to the same RP standard as SD/PD. Anyways, This thread is about preventing shootouts and fights. If people are worried about losing their guns, and time wasted grinding to pay for those guns. Why would crims decide to carry them everywhere, and be so willing to shoot them all the time. Tighten up DM rules, enforce better RP standards. You don't need to get into a shootout every 10 minutes, there are plently of criminal RP opportunities that don't involve getting into a shootout with law enforcement. It's ECRP, not ECPVP
  4. Preface: I primarily play LEO, and will be speaking to what I have experienced recently as LEO. Not much of what I have opinions on is gang-gang shootouts. I think that the amount of shootouts between gangs, gangs and law enforcement has gotten out of hand. Especially when they know that there aren't as many law enforcement on duty as during normal daytime hours. I believe that this is due to the way DM rules have become structured. I believe that it's far too easy to acquire DM rights and begin shooting at other criminals or law enforcement. 1. General Deathmatching rules Recently it seems like simply being pulled over and seeing police lights is enough for you crew to pull heavies and begin lighting up the poor deputy sheriff trainee stopping you for speeding, and the reason your shooting is because you know if they search the cars (which who knows if they will) they will find guns or drugs. Why is everything going straight to a shoot out? Why are you not evading instantly? Why not simply pull out your guns, hold the deputy hostage until he smashes his radio (which they shouldn't hit their panic, and if they do, should be punished by Fear RP), then leave the scene. I don't understand where the shift came in where every criminal simply wants to murder every cop they see rather than avoiding law enforcement until they have to kill them. What RP sense does it make for you to be rolling around the streets constantly carrying heavy weapons, ready to shootout any moment. Why are you not trying to get away from law enforcement. I've seen way to many criminals not only shoot at cops, but begin to chase them down once they start retreating. Brother, you've got your chance to run, it seems like it makes more RP sense to take that chance to run, then chase them down. It's quite frustrating dealing with criminals who just shoot you and leave you with no opportunities to roleplay a situation. And I can only imagine the atrocities committed criminal on criminal. 2. Ambushes Another huge issue is simply driving in your cruiser to just take unholy amounts of gunfire. At first you've got no clue whats going on, then you remember, an entire gang has DM rights on you simply for transporting their member to MD or DOC. I think ambushes should be allowed 100%, but the level at which they're executed recently has been, in my opinion atrocious. Shooting at the car with your friend in it, showing 0 regard for their life, atrocious. Imagine the uproar if criminals kidnapped a deputy, and we shot at their car to try and save the deputies life. There would be uproar for non-rp/fear-rp. Smashing into cruisers with your own car to save your friends life or prevent him from going to jail? Doesn't sit right or make much sense to me. SD/PD are held to a much higher standard of RP and it's time that everyone else begins to follow that. 3. More activities/opportunites As for creating events/opportunities, I very much believe that tightening DM rules, will force players to do other things than just get in shoot outs. As Lewis said, " I am not going to ever agree with the argument that you need script support to roleplay". You can roleplay anything nearly imaginable, without needing scripts. What happened to robberies? Why are stores barely hit anymore? It's pretty much encourage that crims fight and shoot each other, 3rd party fights to get weapons from dead people. What happened to gang RP, what happened to doing literally anything but shooting each other and shooting cops. I still believe it comes down to the shift of focus being PvP rather than RP. TDLR; As I've observed over the last 2 weeks, it's been nothing but shootouts in the streets of Los Santos, a few at labs, and straight up murder ambushes/shootout chases. Win or lose for either side, this is getting extremely repetitive and boring. There's no K/D on the "`/~" menu. Why are we constantly getting in PvP on an RP server. Unlimited content could be added, but if the DM rules stay the same, those who just want to PvP will continue to PvP. If you're not here to roleplay, but shoot at anything that moves, that's fine, just self identify so I can stay clear. Caring about your friends life when their in a LEO cruiser = less shoot outs Not shooting cops because they turned their lights and siren on = less shoot outs DM rights tightening up = less shoot outs Higher RP standards before shooting = less shoot outs It's ECRP, not ECPVP. Thanks.
  5. +25
  6. After King Quan released his first EP, he immediately got down to business and starting working on the next album to add to his discography. King Quan began writing and recording the tracks that in his mind encapsulated hard work and effort it is going to take for him to make it out of the hood. With fan-favorites like 'Me N My Shiesty', 'Nutty Narrative' and 'Praise Flarg' it is estimated that King Quan will eventually make enough money to actually move out of the hood into a nicer and safer area. King Quan absolutely loved writing and recording the songs for his new album. Spending so much time in the studio grinding and spending time with many friends, King Quan has never had more fun producing music. On Tuesday June 27th, Making It Out The Hood went live to all pre-order recipients. King Quan received amazing feedback and has enjoyed the criticism. After the smash-hit debut release of King Quan's latest EP "What It Takes To Be A Prophet", Tyquan celebrated his earning by indulging in many different types of drugs an alcohol. He wanted to acknowledge and celebrate all of the hard work him and Scoobie (Scoob Da Baby Goob) had put in. He continued to party throughout the night and later found himself at a car dealership. Drunk and high Tyquan purchased him self a brand new Scat Pack. He then drove it back to the Bathsheba theatre and parked it up. He awoke the next morning extremely hungover and still hallucinating. He had just semi-soberly stumbled upon a fully customized Scat Pack that he always dreamed of getting. Still under the heavy hallucinations of the drugs Tyquan got in the car and "saw" a note detailing that an anonymous donor had gifted him the car because they loved the EP he released. To this day Tyquan believes that the anonymous donor was famous rapper Lil Dirk.
  7. Young Tyquan Bathsheba was born in an extremely sketchy South Central Los Santos. Tyquan A.K.A. King Quan was raised in a trap house where he was exposed to lots of secondhand drug use. This had a lot of adverse effects on his physical and psychological health. Throughout school, he failed many grades which further set him back educationally. Despite his struggles and downfalls, Tyquan managed to find joy in hearing loud bass trap music coming from crackhouses in his neighborhood. This served to be an outlet for creative and artistic visions that he continued to have. After saving up for his 18th birthday Tyquan bought a plane ticket to Chicago to see his favorite rapper King Von perform live. After enjoying seeing King Von perform, Tyquan was blessed with an opportunity to meet with King Von after the show. As it happened, Lil Dirk was the starting act for King Von’s headline show. Tyquan met them in the VIP lounge after the show. Once in the VIP lounge, they offered Tyquan several types of psychedelics including mushrooms and acid. Tyquan had been around drugs his whole life but had never experienced anything like this. He began to bond with Von and Dirk and they empathized with his struggles growing up in Los Santos. What they did next completely caught Tyquan off guard. Von and Dirk looked at each other and began to recite prayers and chants with each other. They then opened up to Tyquan that they were prophets of Flarg. They were sent by Flarg to O-Block to spread the message and good word of Flarg. Tyquan was instantly captivated and latched on to their beliefs, which would soon become his. [This was an delusional experience due to the drug intake, they did not say this in reality] Von and Dirk began to explain to Tyquan the meaning of their lyrics and how they relate to the message of Flarg and the guidance to Hailbob. Here’s what they explained to him: “And my bitch got ass shots, but I promise that this strap is real” - King Von Von explained that the use of ass shots were the drugs necessary to reach accession to connect with Flarg, and the metaphorical “strap” is Hailbob itself. "Doo, doo, that deuce-deuce blow" - Lil Dirk Dirk then broke down to Tyquan the act of reciting the words “doo doo” and “duece-duece” were their primary chants and Flarg’s favorite method of praise words he wished to hear from his followers. In the end, they sent Tyquan back to Los Santos with a mission, to follow in their foot steps and continue to spread the word of Flarg to the struggling city. This is where he next met Scoobie and the gang of Bathsheba’s. Set on a path of success, Tyquan begins to put in the work - a grind for a better life and a better road for him and his family. What It Takes To Be A Prophet is more than just trap or hip-hop music. It is the expression of feelings that Tyquan feels every day that he so brilliantly forms into words over a crazy beat. Tyquan hopes that by releasing music he is able to show the world the path he is set out on and hopes that others can follow in his footsteps. As of now, Tyquan and the Bathshebas are recording on low-quality laptop mics and mixing on free and malware-ridden software. He hopes that after releasing his EP, he can save up enough to build a studio and a record label to sign more Flarg prophets and followers.
  8. It is currently listed on the door @ $200,000
  9. [SELLING] 1G - Sandy Shores - $200,000 32 Panorama Dr.
  10. [SELLING] Multiple vehicles (Sugoi & Jester RR) All prices negotiable, please contact via call or text - 523-6686 Dinka Sugoi - Black (Maxed) - $300,000 (negotiable) Annis ZR350 - Black (Maxed) - $200,000 (negotiable) [SOLD] Annis Euros - Orange (Maxed) - $150,000 (negotiable) - [SOLD] Dinka Jester RR - Blue (Maxed) - $600,000 (negotiable) - [SOLD] Gauntlet Hellfire - Red Camo Wrap (Maxed) - $175,000 (negotiable) [SOLD] Vapid Sandking XL - Black (Maxed) - $30,000 (negotiable) - [SOLD]
  11. Los Santos Sheriff Department - Detention & Parole Bureau Created by: Field Agent Trent Williams The Detention and Parole Bureau, introduced on April 11th, 2020, aims to rehabilitate and reintegrate persons into community-based corrections for peace and social justice. The Bureau aims to increase public safety by promoting positive change in offender behavior, successfully reintegrating offenders into society, assisting victims of crime while upholding our core values and ethics, and reducing crime, recidivism, and victimizations by motivating offenders to become productive and law-abiding members of society. The overall Mission of the Detention and Parole Bureau is to contribute to public safety by maintaining a balanced system of institutional and community programs that provide a range of custodial options, supervision, and rehabilitative services in order to facilitate successful offenders' re-entry into the community upon release. Efforts to rehabilitate and reintegrate criminal offenders as law-abiding and productive members of society are essential to the reduction of crime. These principles form the foundation for policy, allocation of resources, the establishment of priorities, case management decisions, organizational structure, and future development of the Detention and Parole Bureau. On a day-to-day basis, the Detention and Parole Bureau is in charge of the release of parolees who have been interviewed by Parole Deputies and Agents. After they have been paroled they will be monitored and checked in with for mandatory parole meetings. If for whatever reason a parolee fails their parole agreement, the Detention and Parole Bureau will do everything in its power to apprehend the suspect! The Detention and Parole Bureau Roster: Field Agent Steven Lee - Commanding Officer Senior Agent Wiley Reno - Assisting Commanding Officer Field Agent Trent Williams - Agent-in-Charge of Surveillance Field Agent Fillmoore Grayson - Parole Agent Agent Brian Strange - Parole Agent Agent Colin Quinn - Parole Agent Agent Bunkie Johnson - Parole Agent Deputy Zachery Pines - Parole Deputy Deputy Peter Stanford - Parole Deputy The Detention and Parole Bureau is a flourishing group of individuals and we’re working hard every day to come up with new and exciting ways to improve the efficiency of our jobs.
  12. The First Car Meet The first car meet was a blast, pretty small turnout but the cars and people were awesome. Here are some pictures of the meet. Make sure to read the announcements for the next meet up everyone is invited!
  13. I would recommend learning so more English maybe by reading the server rules. That way you can expand your knowledge of the English language and learn the role play rules of the server. You also didn't use the proper report format. Please fix that.
  14. Removed
  15. Little scared to post mine Here it is tho Squad Grrraaaaa!
  16. ((Why can't real life be like this lmao))
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  17. My suggestion is that you guys should add advertisements and phone numbers. By adding phone numbers it eliminates having to pm out of character. With advertisements, you can advertise that you're selling your car or whatever else you advertise. The adverts should be within the chat for the whole server to see. They should have a 3-minutes cooldown and cost around $500 to post. With private or personal car purchasing you should be able to do /sellvehicle [amount] where ever you need or want to. This can be beneficial if you don't want to or can't get to the selling lot. Also for private businesses. Thanks for taking the time to read my suggestions
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