Sure, ban CE for Dragon when there is dragon tournament on. This is cheating that affects other players, who fight against you in fair fight. But forcing people to spend 2-3x as much time in the game, just for the sake of it and to prove a point... Watching incubus to cheer for becoming 3* chicken? I hope it's going to bite you in the ass, as it proves once again you don't know your own product.
Hiii, I have a big problem with Monster Hunter World, I did change my hunter rank only with the adrees of the HR in cheat engine only to know if it is possible, and now I cant win experience to level up my HR, I can change it with the adress but I cant level up, and I was HR 98, after that I change it to HR 105 without the optional mission, I completed it with HR 105 and after that I talk with a lot of people in game but only with the 2 characters in workshop the game crashed, I dont know what to do guys, some help please
Credits
Lilikura - Helping identify 4 skills for Armors
bbfox - Full List of Hunting Monster Logs & Arena Quests
@Seneekikaant - Motivation to continue production of cheat table, and gift.
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There is this Thing more to be recommended to every Gentleman who affects a Country Life, viz. Not to embarras himself with too much Business for the Affairs of the Country consist much in Labour and Drudgery so that he who has a great deal to manage, if he trust to Servants will certainly be cheated or neglected by them or if he hurries about it himself, he will be in a perpetual Toil, tho' of never so great Strength of Body and to lose all the Pleasure of his Life in endless Pains and Vexations, and having many hot Irons in the Fire to be work'd upon at once, some of them will cool and miscarry upon his hands. 'Twas very well observ'd by the ingenious Bocalin, when all the Kingdoms and States presented themselves before Lorenzo Medici, to be weigh'd by his Balance, and when it came to the turn of the Spanish Monarchy to be put into the Scale, it still prov'd lighter and lighter by the Addition of new Provinces so that Spain, under Philip the Second, being infinitely augmented by the Access of Sicily, Naples, Milan, the Low-Countrys, Burgundy, &c. was less weighty, and considerable than before. The Reason was, because all the Spanish Treasure was exhausted to maintain such remote and foreign [Page 17] Dependencies, and serv'd but to feed the Avarice of Viceroys and Governours so that the main Body grew consumptive and feeble by having its Nourishment diverted for the use of such disproportionable and foreign Members, with their excrementitious Superfluities. The same thing happens then inevitably in a private Gentleman's Estate, when it is too great for a single Person to manage so that there is no way for him, having sufficient to employ himself about, but to farm out the Overplus to others. A numerous Herd of Servants, (tho' they are necessary Helps to one who has a great deal under hand, and serve to fill up the Measures and Figure of a Family, yet) do in reality impoverish the House they belong to, being like Wenns, and the like Excrescencies, which, tho' they seem to be a Part of the Body, and to add to the Bulk, do in Truth suck the best Juice to themselves, whilst the genuine Parts languish and decay.
And as there ought to be a Diary or Register for Seasons, so likewise for the Productions which come from Foreign Parts and to this End and Purpose, 'twould be a Diversion well worthy the Ingenuity of many Young Gentlemen who travel, to be curious in observing what Fruits every Soil does yield, as also the Nature and Complexion of the Soil, the Temper of the Climate, the Rules of their Husbandry, the Tackle and Instruments they make use of, as also their Methods of Manurement, with what Returns they make of their Labours. As for Curiosities of Plants, Fruit-Trees, Flowers, and other Rarities of the Gardens, brought over from Foreign Countries, [Page 20] we have certainly as great a Collection as any Nation under Heaven, there being none to be found which is so universally stor'd with all Provisions of this kind as is England, and possibly some parts of the Low Countries which Benefit we have from the great Trade we drive in all Parts of the World so that, whatsoever is rare, is brought over, and naturaliz'd amongst us, being made free of our Soil.
I Shall begin with Inns and Alehouses: These, at first, were allow'd for the Relief of Travellers, for the Accommodation of such as resort to Markets, and for the Conveniency of Country-People meeting with one another, to discourse of their Private Bargains and Business. But however 'twas in Days of Yore, certain 'tis at present that there are few of these Houses, especially the lesser TiplingHouses, which answer these Ends and rarely shall we meet with any which is not prostituted rather to Drunkenness and Debauchery: For to such Places as these it is, that the lewd and improvident Labourer frequently resorts, upon Pretence of comforting his weary Body with a Cup of good Liquor, there spending the Profits of a Week's Labour with a nasty Quean, whilst his Wife and Children are ready to perish with Famine. To prevent which Calamity, they betake themselves to begging and stealing, and at length (especially in their declining Days) they fall an Escheat to the Parish, or perhaps to the Gallows having spent wastfully in such wicked Places what [Page 164] should have maintain'd them in Old Age, and in the Time of Sickness.
Amongst the Abuses of Inns or Alehouses, it is too well known what all Men suffer from their cheating Measures: Their Quart-Pots or Flagons, their Juggs, their Muggs, their Jacks, their Carmikins, their Beakers, their Tum lers, their Glass-Bottles, their Tankards, and above all, their Silver-Tankards, tho' all of them be pretty little Curiosities, yet are they most gross Cheats, not containing above a true Pint and [Page 180] a half so that in Four Shillings expended this way, One is pure Cousenage. Much better were it, if their Measures (after the Custom of other well polic'd Countries) were mark'd and seal'd, and reduc'd to a Standard all England over, as our Weights are over all the World: Whereas in a paltry Ale-house a small, slender-wasted Flagon, with a broad empty bottom, and with sides, back, and belly crush'd almost together, and capp'd half way with Froth, goes down very glibly with my bonny Customer at two or three Gulps and when Good-fellows are upon the Quill of Drinking, the Strength and Capacity of the Man is much esteem'd by the Number of Flagons whereas the silly Sot, perhaps, never drank half that quantity, for which he sets so high a Value upon himself, and pays so dearly.
The like Cheats we meet with daily from the trashy Ingredients of sophisticated Liquors, which many times does advance them double or treble in the Price, when really they are much beneath the Plain Drinks for Health and Goodness nor are we to forget the hard Names with which many Liquors are baptiz'd which puts me in mind of what I have sometime heard of a Two-Pot Knave, who being out of Reputation for Drink, or (to speak in the Language of a Tapster) being at the lowest Stoop, and on the very Dreggs and Lees of his Profession, was advis'd to make Daucus-Ale, which he christned Blan-Carote. This [Page 181] dainty new Name, by the help of some pleasant Waggs of his Acquaintance, was cry'd up for a curious Outlandish, Low-Country Drink and this was sufficient to give it Credit, bringing such Custom to my honest Draw-Causor, that in a short time after, he became very rich, and was at the least a Squire's Fellow, and, for ought I know, something better. But such Cheats as these are rather to be wink'd at than punish'd for I know no Law which can oblige a Magistrate to put Brains into the Heads of Fools and to put them all into Bedlam who fall under this Character, would be very troublesome: Let them rest merry therefore, for their own and for others Diversion, till they fall irrecoverably into the Hands of the Catchpole.
There are another sort of Poor likewise, which ought truly to be provided for: I mean our lusty, sturdy, vagrant Beggars of both Sexes: These rambling from House to House are constant Retainers to all lousie Inns and Alehouses, and are the best Informers that Highwaymen and Burglares can rely upon, and many times pick a Pocket, break a House, steal a Horse, and cut a Throat with as much dexterity as the best Professors of these Arts. They colour their Rogueries under the Disguise of Tinkers, Crale-Carriers, Ragmen, Inkle or Starch-Sellers, Net-weavers, Travellers, &c. For whom our Laws, 'tis true, have made some small Provision, but for want of a just distribution, such pilfring Vagabonds are found to swarm every where. It would be much better, if an old Law of Valentinian the Emperour were reviv'd by which, Every such Vagabond as was able to work, became Prize to the next Freeman which met him, and was enroll'd amongst his Servants or Slaves to Till his Ground during life, to the end he might not cheat others by his Impostures and pretended Beggary. Such a Law as this would be of more advantage to this Nation than any possibly now extant, [Page 227] there being no place left for Remisness, Affection or Partiality for if one should suffer such an Errant-Merchant to go free, another would not fail to apprehend him, and where a Man's own Private Interest is a Law, it can never happen that such a Law should want its due Execution.
Now let us compare with this a real auctioneer's catalogue. We will take that of Goldsmith'schambers, by way of departing as little as we can from the poetical. For, as Walt Whitman wouldsay (and here we quote quite literally, prefixing only a verse of our own, from "A Catalogue ofthe Household Furniture with the select collection of scarce, curious, and valuable books of Dr.Goldsmith, deceased, which, by order of the admr, will be sold by auction, &c.,&c.)
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