16th May 2006, 11:14 PM
Well guess what? Babelfish apparently can get a concept THROUGH to our language every now and again, because I THINK I understand what this kid was suggesting at that site!
Gee no! Yay! Of the #@!$ RPG! Not never sad him parting, but just saying goodbye for a time, BUT NINTENDO NEVER RETURN TO! SQUEENIX PLEASE OF THE SOUL DOLL GIVE!
Quote:Nickname * HiGe
Contribution theme * The reflection concerning the character
Most first the hammer っ it is with マリオシリーズ the thing.
In case by your, that was スーパーマリオ RPG.
Seeing CM, very borrowing to the friend of that time with interest......
Certain, you have forgotten to return it seems the way that way......
Well it sets aside trivial thing, by your very you like that game.
Even among them, game original character
The doll and the Gee no where soul resides.
In juvenile mind, it stayed in him with the reflection very.
Because sale at that time it was the elementary school student, freely there was a time when you play.
Because of that, being also it clears to be quick extremely, but......
It is not never sad meaning in the ending,
Simply just a little lonesome separation waited.
If there is a next work, being to think, that certainly and it can meet to the Gee no, it does, but...
Because it is quick, for time to pass, already it became good age, (laughing
Certainly, if there is no this questionnaire, you did not remember either the thing of the Gee no, probably will be.
While answering to the questionnaire, when perhaps it does and it can meet, that... just just you expecting a little, whether it is it is not, it increases, (laughing
Gee no! Yay! Of the #@!$ RPG! Not never sad him parting, but just saying goodbye for a time, BUT NINTENDO NEVER RETURN TO! SQUEENIX PLEASE OF THE SOUL DOLL GIVE!
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)