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Loose Canon wrote:Extreme (or anyone)
Have you ever encountered a town role that has conditions attached which include not being able to claim the role?





























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Devante wrote:Devon, do you have anything you can add to help town? You've been on for a couple days now but haven't really added anything and king did state he had a pr that could be helpful






















Loose Canon wrote: by Loose Canon » Mon Nov 10, 2025 3:23 am
A backup that cannot say they are a backup?


























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Loose Canon wrote:Extreme (or anyone)
Have you ever encountered a town role that has conditions attached which include not being able to claim the role?


































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Loose Canon wrote:Halrob I think I almost agree except not Devon and EW, but Devante and EW are the most likely to be linked - that is assuming that Devante is 3P.
A lot to me would fit including (but not exclusively EW thinking he might be linked)
There's a lot of what I could be accused of tunnelling here - I prefer to call it prospecting ( although its usually the support industries (good time girls, bars and hardware suppliers) not the gold prospectors themselves that ended up making money from goldrushes.)
I think Strike (Mafia) , 3P (Devante) and Townie with Power were linked.
With Strike down I think we/town have 3P to thank for that. Thank you 3P (Devante), but if so 3P you may be of no more use to town so thank you and goodbye.
I think a link between 3P and power townie still exists currently.
I did think power townie would die if 3P was lynched.
That might still be so, but it might also be the case that power townie doesn't die but just gets vanillaised (providing that isn't me, and I don't think it is, I prefer to think of it has having his balls cut off).
For the thought of Devante/Lecter firstly eating Strike's brain, and then as a passing swipe Castrating a Townie (but not me) (but with the very large community sword - and I'm wondering if Strike didn't have knowledge of the set up when he speculated on the Sword) ;
That's surely got to be (for comedy's sake) worth a lynch on Devante just in case.
Grab your balls guys (while you still have them) Lynch Devante.





























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Loose Canon wrote:So you are saying again that another town dies if you are lynched.
The other town needs to save you then if that is true.
Any other such town who thinks you might be right has to consider
1. How you got both of you in that predicament from D1.
2. The counter argument of 3 fates intertwined.
3. That a claim kills 2 town is unprecedented
4. That if all that fails and in the case of uncertainty there is a 1 in 8 chance house odds that you are 3p





























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SoN!c wrote:Deadline D2 is set at November 17th 19:57:59 PM NEW YORK TIME ZONE.
Shocking murder events have marked November 17th across history, each leaving a distinct and unsettling cultural imprint.
The most infamous of these came in 1957, when police entered Ed Gein’s isolated Wisconsin farmhouse and discovered evidence of grave robbing and murder that would profoundly influence American horror fiction.
Realizing the extent of the crimes, investigators reported objects fashioned from human remains and signs that Gein had attempted to construct what he called a “woman suit.”
It was a case so disturbing that it inspired characters like Norman Bates, Leatherface, and Buffalo Bill across film and literature.
Known crimes of November 17th are not limited to the 20th century, however.
Earlier, in 1795, the hanging of William Smith in Sydney became notorious both for its brutality and for the public’s reaction to what many saw as a disproportionate punishment for petty burglary.
When we move forward again to November 17th, 1971, we encounter the Alphabet Murders —an unresolved series of killings in which each young victim’s name shared initials with the town they were found in.
Observers noted that the pattern of initials suggested deliberate selection, elevating the case into one of the era’s most haunting unsolved mysteries as ach victim was killed in a similar method, and their bodies were discarded in or near a town or village whose name began with the same letter as the victim’s names.
Legend and true crime documentation continue to revisit each of these dates, examining how they shaped collective fears and public memory.
From the rural farmhouse to the colonial scaffold to the quiet neighborhoods, November 17th remains a date marked by chilling history.


























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