
u/Zramhort

O neymar NÃO é o maior artilheiro da história da seleção
Na real, isso não é nem uma opinião, é um fato, a mídia brasileira só inventou essa coisa do Neymar ser o artilheiro com 79 e Pelé em segundo com 77 para compensar pelos fracassos.
O Neymar só fica em 1º se você contar apenas os "jogos oficiais" do Pelé e contar os jogos totais do Neymar.
Se for usar essa definição ridícula de "jogos oficiais" que a FIFA inventou depois dos anos 2000, o Neymar fica com 77 e o Pelé também com 77, mas como o Pelé tem menos jogos totais, ele ainda estaria na frente.
Se for contar as partidas totais, aí sim o Neymar vai para os 79, porém o Pelé vai para 95, ganhando de lavada.
Em conclusão, se for ter o mínimo de coerência e usar o mesmo sistema de classificação para os dois, em ambos os casos o Pelé tem vantagem. O Neymar só fica na frente se usar um sistema para ele e outro pro o Pelé.
In all my almost six years playing this game, why is this the first time we've had real geopolitical implications? Like in the real game, not in notes or books about the past of Teyvat. I'm talking about the world-building in gameplay. I think the closest we got to this was that Natlan event with that racist Fontainian, but now, in this random event that most people would count as a middle-region filler, we have real geopolitical implications: the distrust in the "poor" region's people, the ignorance of the dominant region's folk, the cultural implications, the interactions, and the call out to the justice system of the 'nation of justice' being the worst justice system of all nations. Like, we had parts of it in the past, but it always felt bland. "The desert folk are looked down upon," yet we barely see it in gameplay (probably because most Eremites we met are enemies) like even the sewers in Fontaine are barley even mentioned, what you mean the one of the richness nations has most of its population living in a sewer and there's barley any real world implications to it. For the first time, Teyvat feels alive, not a world that had fallen, whose only real interactions were all in the past. It's alive now, this is beautiful. I'm begging you, Mihoyo, like the beggiest beggar in all of begdom, please keep this up to Snezhnaya. We NEED this. This is the bare minimum level of political complexity we NEED in a nation like Snezhnaya.
In all my almost six years playing this game, why is this the first time we've had real geopolitical implications? Like in the real game, not in notes or books about the past of Teyvat. I'm talking about the world-building in gameplay. I think the closest we got to this was that Natlan event with that racist Fontainian, but now, in this random event that most people would count as a middle-region filler, we have real geopolitical implications: the distrust in the "poor" region's people, the ignorance of the dominant region's folk, the cultural implications, the interactions, and the call out to the justice system of the 'nation of justice' being the worst justice system of all nations. Like, we had parts of it in the past, but it always felt bland. "The desert folk are looked down upon," yet we barely see it in gameplay (probably because most Eremites we met are enemies) like even the sewers in Fontaine are barley even mentioned, what you mean the one of the richness nations has most of its population living in a sewer and there's barley any real world implications to it. For the first time, Teyvat feels alive, not a world that had fallen, whose only real interactions were all in the past. It's alive now, this is beautiful. I'm begging you, Mihoyo, like the beggiest beggar in all of begdom, please keep this up to Snezhnaya. We NEED this. This is the bare minimum level of political complexity we NEED in a nation like Snezhnaya.
Got Sigewinne on Pity 80 (was already at 40 from the Sumeru banner), then Lyney on Pity 10, then another Lyney and an Emilie in the same 10-pull on Pity 30. And yes, Emilie was after Lyney, so I have another fate point for him 😃