Precisely Measure Any Area In Seconds Using The MeasureKing Tape Measurer

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Jesus Schmidt

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Jun 7, 2021, 9:00:19 PM6/7/21
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A Regular Tape Measure Couldn't Measure That. But Ours Can.

This tape measure includes three different measuring tools so you'll always get an accurate measurement no matter the object. A rolling tool great for curved srufaces and irregular objects, a flex cord for measuring around objects, and a laser tool for long measurements and hard to reach areas. On top of that all measurements are precise to 1/100 of an inch.

 
 
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Never Second Guess Your Measurements Again.

 

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Eighteen months ago, GameSpot awarded Disco Elysium a 10/10 review for the original PC release. Since then, developer ZA/UM has taken the opportunity to fully voice the entire cast and integrate several new major quests for a new edition, The Final Cut, which comes as a free update for existing PC owners and marks the game's first release on PlayStation consoles.

The most notable change is the voice acting. In the original release, only some characters were voiced and even then only some of their dialogue was voiced; often you'd hear just the first few words or a sentence of the conversation, with the rest presented as text you'd have to read. In The Final Cut, you can hear every single character speak every single word of dialogue--except in a few instances where we noticed a line was skipped. The quality across the board is excellent, with a wide range of accents reflecting the cosmopolitan population of the city of Revachol. Some of the original voice actors were recast to the benefit of their characters; Cuno's gratingly obnoxious Liverpudlian squawk, for example, has been toned down to better suit his ultimately sympathetic arc.

Special mention must go to Lenval Brown, who nails a script apparently exceeding 350,000 words to provide voice to the protagonist's thoughts. His deep baritone may not have matched my preconceived notion of how that internal monologue sounded, but he quickly won me over by imbuing much of the absurdity with a gravitas that grounds the main character in this ridiculous world.

The primary new content comes in the form of four Political Vision Quests that further explore the game's political compass, sending you deeper into the pointed satire of one of four ideologies. While it's obviously terrific to have more Disco Elysium quests to enjoy, The Final Cut doesn't make it easy to experience them.

The four new quests are tucked away mid-game behind specific prerequisites--their very nature understandably means access to them is inextricably linked to the way you've role-played your character. But it also means that once you commence one, the other 

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