http://store.steampowered.com/app/321840/ its free, go play it. you`ll laugh, you`ll cry, you`ll form lasting visual novel memories. This is coming from a guy who has never played visual novels before.
Who Wants to Be My Friend? Yep! I embnraced my inner Pinkie! Chat with me, anything! Discuss what you want! Let's be friends!
Okay...I guess I could go ahead and take a stab at this. I'm not really sure what to talk about, though...
Wait, I'm already your friend. But I'll still answer anyways, Rainbow Dash is my favorite (obviously) and my fave slushie is would be Kiwi Strawberry. :3
Well, the funny things is that you'll do it, too, unless you're extremely lucky or excessively privileged in your society. It's not as if there are a whole lot of options when you're first starting out. Ridley put it in a rather depressing light, even though that is certainly how it feels sometimes, but there are massive benefits to working as he described that can't really be seen on the surface. On the face of it, it's just a temporary solution for some people until they can find a better job and make the dreams that they work towards come true. But the immediate benefits aren't bad, either; you might have less free time, but if you're single and not a parent, you own pretty much all of it. You can do whatever you want with it. Most people don't. But you can. Besides, keeping up even the barest of appearances of being responsible and secure is important for forming significant social relationships, something that is important to some - if not all - of us.
Learning the lyrics to a song that 100% Engrish nonsense is tricky. It's hard to remember lyrics that don't make sense.
I've learnt a few songs in other languages. Not quite the same, but it's helped a little, learning the language and its structure.
This isn't in another language though. It's all in English that makes no sense because it's written by Japanese people who only have the most basic understanding of English grammar. That trips me up a lot. I've learned plenty of Japanese songs in the past though.
I imagine it would be easier if you knew what original Japanese words the writers had intended on using so that you could have a translation in your head to associate with the actual melody, and to give it meaning... but that's like a challenge within a challenge.