@deutschFELLA there’s no coding, look extremely closely at the nose and go off to the side. You will see pistons that push tiny but really buoyant blocks high up to submerge. Also make sure you connect the jet engines to these blocks so they are always above water
I don’t recognize this browser (Chrome on iPad?).
Websites load a file when you load them. This is an HTML file, which references a CSS file that’s stored on the server. So the CSS file might say that the text color is green so that when the HTML file loads some text it comes out as green regardless of what the HTML says. This is useful for web developers because instead of manually writing out the style rules for each page they can just make it reference the CSS file that’s on the server, which is why websites usually have fairly consistent styling across the board. What’s happening here is that for some reason (bad internet, DNS error, Lord knows) your device is able to load the HTML and the images that the HTML is referencing, but not the CSS file. That’s why all of this is default formatting (dead simple, all aligned to the left with no columns or anything, Times New Roman) which is usually defined by the browser iirc.
Post is “OmniShark” by @Hiiamhere
Oh sh1t, that not good
@Technicalstrat okay
@B1BLancer yeah. I just want to stay peaceful so I will help whenever needed.
@Technicalstrat the convention has not been signed by Spin, and most likely never will be signed by Spin.
@B1BLancer bet..
Simpleplanes on Internet explorer 1998:
@deutschFELLA there’s no coding, look extremely closely at the nose and go off to the side. You will see pistons that push tiny but really buoyant blocks high up to submerge. Also make sure you connect the jet engines to these blocks so they are always above water
Also, can you tell me how do your subs go underwater?
Pls give me some code I suck
Same. That happened to me not too long ago
@Noname918181818181818181 🚡
Imagine
@B1BLancer did you ever think on the signing of the Kindiva convention
Oh, that thing happened to me 2 times.
@Technicalstrat I call it the internet, rhymes with grug
@B1BLancer I have had that too. (Reverse grugifiying)
@32 thank you, web browser is DuckDuckGo I use it because it’s an adblocker for everything and blocks tracking and stuff.
I don’t recognize this browser (Chrome on iPad?).
Websites load a file when you load them. This is an HTML file, which references a CSS file that’s stored on the server. So the CSS file might say that the text color is green so that when the HTML file loads some text it comes out as green regardless of what the HTML says. This is useful for web developers because instead of manually writing out the style rules for each page they can just make it reference the CSS file that’s on the server, which is why websites usually have fairly consistent styling across the board. What’s happening here is that for some reason (bad internet, DNS error, Lord knows) your device is able to load the HTML and the images that the HTML is referencing, but not the CSS file. That’s why all of this is default formatting (dead simple, all aligned to the left with no columns or anything, Times New Roman) which is usually defined by the browser iirc.