Useless Thread MMI: Millerade Appreciation Thread

sym pointing out he's being boosted to gm

who cares if he plays with better people who carry him. the whole 6v6 theme has gotten more aggressive

back in the battlefield day you could relax with average stats and enjoy fun
 
Apparently it was a bad idea to take my wife out to lunch today while her sister watched our baby so I could complain about the low BJ count over the past few months.

I had some metaphors and talking points pre planned and it mostly went well (presentation wise) but I didnt cleanly land the "our relationship is like a chair that has 4 legs .." analogy.
 
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Layoffs are scary

I came back from a 2+ month parental leave on January 2nd, and January 6th layoffs were announced. 😖

But then I just found a better gig all around. Pay, benefits, culture, all that. Guess it worked out because it probably pushed me over the edge with initiative to find this job, where had I felt comfortable would have probably sat comfortably.
 
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Juan was released from the casino’s security office the next morning, disheveled, exhausted, and deeply wounded by the loss of Mr. Freedom.

“I feel empty,” he muttered as we walked down the neon-lit streets of Seoul. “Like a piece of my soul has been ripped away.”

Brenda smirked. “Maybe don’t bet plushies next time, dumbass.”

Juan shot her a glare, then turned to me. “We have to get them back.”

I sighed. “Juan, Ohtani won them fair and square.”

“But he doesn’t need them!” Juan whined. “He’s got millions of dollars, a perfect jawline, and a fastball that could kill a man. I have nothing!

“Self-inflicted,” Brenda noted.

Juan ignored her and stopped dead in his tracks, his eyes lighting up with a terrifying determination.

“I need to challenge Ohtani to a duel.”

Brenda and I stared at him.

“A duel?” I repeated.

“Yes,” Juan said firmly. “Baseball. Mano a mano. One-on-one. If I win, I get my plushies back. If I lose… well, that won’t happen.”

Brenda cackled. “Juan, you haven’t played a sport in your life.”

“I played T-ball!” Juan argued.

Brenda wiped a tear from her eye. “Yeah, when you were six.”

I sighed. “How do you even plan to challenge Ohtani? He’s the biggest baseball star in the world. He’s not going to waste his time playing catch with a guy who eats gas station sushi.”

Juan folded his arms. “Then we go to Japan.”

Brenda and I blinked.

“What?” I asked.

“We go to Japan,” Juan repeated. “Ohtani has to respect a man who follows him across the ocean for a showdown.”

“That’s stalking,” I pointed out.

Juan shook his head. “No, no, it’s sportsmanship. Besides, we were already planning on going to Japan.”

“No, we weren’t,” Brenda and I said at the same time.

Juan clapped his hands together. “Great! We leave in the morning!”

And just like that, we were headed back to Japan.
 
We touched down at Narita Airport early in the morning, groggy and unprepared for whatever stupidity Juan had in store. Brenda was already plotting some sort of plushie-related business venture, while Juan stood at the baggage carousel muttering to himself about “honor” and “baseball justice.”

I knew this trip was going to be a disaster before we even got through customs.

“Alright,” Brenda said as we stepped into the Tokyo sunlight. “Time to find our place in this city. I think we should open a plushie sushi bar.

I blinked at her. “A what?”

“You heard me,” she said. “Sushi, but plushies.”

“Plushies aren’t food, Brenda.”

She waved me off. “That’s why it’s genius! The real sushi is for eating, and the plushie sushi is for collecting! People here love cute stuff. We’ll make a killing.”

Juan barely acknowledged this. His eyes were burning with a singular purpose.

“We have to find Ohtani,” he declared.

Brenda rolled her eyes. “And how do you plan on doing that, genius? Just walk up to the Tokyo Dome and demand a meeting?”

“Yes,” Juan said.

And then, in a move that surprised no one, he did exactly that.

The Tokyo Dome Incident

Hours later, after an excessive amount of pleading and bribing a security guard with a Babe Woof plushie, we somehow found ourselves inside the stadium.

Juan stood at the pitcher’s mound, gripping a baseball like it was a sacred artifact. He had forced himself into a full baseball uniform he bought at a thrift store, complete with oversized cleats and pants that barely fit.

“I am here to reclaim my honor!” Juan bellowed, raising his plushie glove—yes, he had a plushie glove—into the air.

The small crowd of stadium workers looked on in confusion. A maintenance guy swept some dust off the infield, unimpressed.

“I demand a one-on-one showdown with Shohei Ohtani!

Silence.

Then, after a long pause, a security guard sighed and pulled out his walkie-talkie.

“We got another one.”

Brenda cackled. “Oh, this is about to be good.”

Juan’s Brief, Humiliating Baseball Career

Ohtani never showed up—of course he didn’t. But someone must have pitied Juan, because within minutes, an actualJapanese minor-league pitcher came jogging onto the field to humor him.

The guy was barely a professional, but still way out of Juan’s league.

Juan stepped up to the plate, gripping the bat like it was an unfamiliar object. The pitcher wound up, threw a fastball—and Juan swung so hard that he spun in a full circle and collapsed.

The ball smacked into the catcher’s mitt with a pop.

Juan groaned from the dirt. “I wasn’t ready.”

“Sure,” Brenda snorted.

They gave him three more pitches. He whiffed all of them. The last one hit him in the stomach.

By the time he crawled off the field, the stadium workers were laughing, the minor-league pitcher was shaking his head, and Brenda was holding back tears of amusement.

Juan wiped dirt from his face and glared at us.

“This was not a fair fight.”

“You embarrassed yourself in two different languages,” I told him.

Brenda put a hand on his shoulder. “This was a real barroom banger of a humiliation.”

Juan groaned. “I need food.”

Brenda clapped her hands together. “Great! Time to open the plushie sushi bar!”

And just like that, we were in business.
 

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