>games that teach you something about real life
Games that teach you something about real life
KCD taught me about conciliation crosses, which were handmade and set in medieval times as a symbol of conciliation to a victim's family. Placed where such an accident, murder or other disasters/epidemics happened.
Since then found quite a few hidden in my country.
Total War: Warhammer II™ taught me to like rats
MFS taught me so much I can't even remember most of it
Could you fly a plane after doing it in a video game?
Buy low, sell high.
KSP taught me orbital mechanics
It doesn't seem that hard
people still do that kind of stuff, just not out of stone
never seen a tree, electrical pole, or street light with like a cross and some shit on it because someone crashed into it and died?
seen so many of them
What does doorkickers teach you? How to slice the pie?
Nioh taught me some probably very inaccurate stuff about Japanese history.
how to kill rightwing militiaman terror cells
Where do you live? You see them all the time in America, especially along highways where people got into fatal crashes.
Never noticed it, no.
>in America
really? as in handmade crosses either in stone or wood? I live in Portugal
Wood ones, yeah. Not handmade stone, but you could probably buy one. Usually just tiny painted wood.
That's rly interesting, I thought it was exclusively an old european thing. Around here I've seen a few old stone ones to the pic rel north, usually hidden under overgrown flora
explain further
>The More You Know
There is one of these near where I used to live, one of many in my city. The story I heard was that it was for a biker who died however he was supposedly in the wrong because he was one of many bikers who jumped on some out-of-town guy at a bar, for reasons I'm not aware of, then left the bar only to be hit along with many of his comrades by the beat-up dude in his truck, like bowling pins.
>where I used to live
US? So is it a wodden cross?
mfs has to be a huge fake
flying planes cant be that easy
The part of the city I used to live in. Yes I'm in US. They can be wooden, plastic, whatever. The material doesn't matter. Like the other user said, they're normally placed to signify an accident, like a tombstone in a way.