The strange pagan worship is an unexpected perk for my town, an extra option to stave off boredom and keep me warm through the winter. why the frick would anyone want to surround this god with a fence?????? You use the fencing to accentuate the god by putting the free pieces behind it like an ornate clothes-changing curtain with a right angle in the middle of it for when the god wants some privacy during modest moments or when something extra **** is going down. Its already better than Ling and i havent even used it yet.
Are other ep. From there too? Other than the three from the offer
@LPNintendoITA - Forgive me for needing clarification... Were you asking if other event items were from that episode too?
If that's the case, I do not think so. The pagan part was about 30 seconds long in the beginning of the episode, and there was not much more in the rest.
Baal (/ˈbeɪl/ bayl; sometimes spelled Bael, Baël (French), Baell) is in 17th century goetic occult writings one of the seven princes of ****. The name is drawn from the Canaanite deity Baal mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as the primary god of the Phoenicians.
In this unholy hierarchy, Baal (usually spelt "Bael" in this context; there is a possibility that the two figures aren't connected) was ranked as the first and principal king in ****, ruling over the East. According to some authors Baal is a Duke, with sixty-six legions of demons under his command.
During the English Puritan period Baal was either compared to Satan or considered his main assistant. According to Francis Barrett he has the power to make those who invoke him invisible, and to some other demonologists his power is stronger in October. According to some sources,[citation needed] he can make people wise, and speaks hoarsely.
While his Semitic predecessor was depicted as a man or a bull,[1] the demon Baal was in grimoire tradition said to appear in the forms of a man, cat, toad, or combinations thereof. An illustration in Collin de Plancy's 1818 book Dictionnaire Infernal placed the heads of the three creatures onto a set of spider legs.[2][3]
Nothing like some more satanic **** to dump on us gamers.
If you want to start a topic in the off-topic section, I'll gladly join the discussion on this very issue. But it's best to keep it there and not on these threads. Let the people who are happy with the event enjoy themselves in peace and we can vent elsewhere
Whoa! The in-game animation bears a striking resemblance to the gifs that have been posted in this topic! It's uncanny, to the point of not being coincidence. Which leaves us with only one conclusion: gif-based prophecy was perpetrated on us hard and heavy here, and through it I witnessed the future of paganism that then came to pass in Springfield! And this pagan party is hot. It validates the whole theme of the event and makes it all worthwhile. I feel the pull toward paganism personally, as well as the need to secure a real-life idol of some sort and place it in combination with a magnificent outdoor grill / firepit.
Baal (/ˈbeɪl/ bayl; sometimes spelled Bael, Baël (French), Baell) is in 17th century goetic occult writings one of the seven princes of ****. The name is drawn from the Canaanite deity Baal mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as the primary god of the Phoenicians.
In this unholy hierarchy, Baal (usually spelt "Bael" in this context; there is a possibility that the two figures aren't connected) was ranked as the first and principal king in ****, ruling over the East. According to some authors Baal is a Duke, with sixty-six legions of demons under his command.
During the English Puritan period Baal was either compared to Satan or considered his main assistant. According to Francis Barrett he has the power to make those who invoke him invisible, and to some other demonologists his power is stronger in October. According to some sources,[citation needed] he can make people wise, and speaks hoarsely.
While his Semitic predecessor was depicted as a man or a bull,[1] the demon Baal was in grimoire tradition said to appear in the forms of a man, cat, toad, or combinations thereof. An illustration in Collin de Plancy's 1818 book Dictionnaire Infernal placed the heads of the three creatures onto a set of spider legs.[2][3]
Nothing like some more satanic **** to dump on us gamers.
I love it. I want more in my game. As much as I can get my hands on. Just to spite people like you.
~Always be Designing~
Don't increase the Item Limit? Then I don't play. Period.
Replies
it's Ba'al
"So It's Come to This: A Simpsons Clip Show"
Notable episode, on the origins of April Fools' Day.
God bless those pagans.
Yes, please. Great idea. Of course this only works if EA informed us of that ability....and they would not. And they'd have to debonus the fence.
Thanks!
@LPNintendoITA - Forgive me for needing clarification... Were you asking if other event items were from that episode too?
If that's the case, I do not think so. The pagan part was about 30 seconds long in the beginning of the episode, and there was not much more in the rest.
If you want to start a topic in the off-topic section, I'll gladly join the discussion on this very issue. But it's best to keep it there and not on these threads. Let the people who are happy with the event enjoy themselves in peace and we can vent elsewhere
Waiting to see if anybody gets the reference.