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Claudztzy

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Everything posted by Claudztzy

  1. Yes. I wonder why. The others got updated
  2. Stake has been buggy since the other day. I can't chat and can't check my sports bets because it won't show anything. I hope they will fix the site soon.
  3. I edited my bet id cause i got a higher odd but in the top 50, my placement wasn't changed. It still the same. Will ut be changed next time? Mine too pls
  4. casino:420267518841
  5. I hope stake would provide more betting lines on players so we can adjust our bets and have decent lines to pick instead of just 3,4 or 5 adjuatments on the player lines. Also,I hope when the game specifically said, "game starts in minutes", we can still put sgps instead of them locking the lines. Hopefully, this will get noticed.
  6. 1. 118 2. Jaxson Dart 3. 2 4. Jaxson Dart 5. 49 points Stake: Lily0211
  7. casino:416571131323
  8. This is based on a true story I experienced when I was a child. The sun was a lazy, hazy orb in the afternoon sky, casting long, distorted shadows as I ventured towards the old, abandoned house on the outskirts of our province. Everyone knew its story – or rather, its lack of a story. It had stood vacant for decades, windows like vacant eyesores, paint peeling like sunburnt skin. Locals whispered about its silence, its unnatural stillness, but no one ever claimed a haunting, just a profound sense of abandonment. My mission that day was simpler, less morbid: mangoes. The house was surrounded by ancient mango trees, their branches heavy with ripe fruit that often dropped to the overgrown grass below. It was an easy haul, and a delicious one. I moved quietly, scanning the ground, picking up the perfectly ripe, sun-warmed 'ripe' mangoes, their sweetness already a promise on my tongue. I had filled my basket halfway, a contented hum on my lips, when it happened. It wasn't a whisper, nor a shout. It was a voice, ragged and dry, like autumn leaves skittering across forgotten graves. It seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere, a vibration in the very air around me. "Go away," it rasped, low and guttural. "Go away." My heart seized in my chest. I froze, basket clutched tight, every muscle in my body tensed. I knew, with absolute certainty, that there was no one in that house. I had explored it as a curious child, finding only dust, decay, and the faint scent of forgotten lives. No squatters, no vagrants, just emptiness. Yet, the voice hung in the air, thick and cold. I didn't dare look towards the house, fearing what I might see, or worse, what I might not see. The silence that followed felt heavier than the voice itself, pregnant with an unseen presence. My instincts screamed. Without another thought, without even daring a backward glance, I dropped the basket of precious mangoes and ran. I ran like the wind itself was at my heels, like the unseen voice was a tangible shadow pursuing me through the tangled undergrowth. I didn't stop until the familiar safety of our village homes came into view, my lungs burning, my pulse thrumming a frantic rhythm in my ears. I never went back. Not for the mangoes, not for idle curiosity, not even for a fleeting glimpse of the house that had always just been 'abandoned.' Now, it was something else entirely. It was the place where a voice had warned me, a voice from the void, a voice that turned a simple afternoon into a terror I would carry long after the sun had set. The mangoes remained, I imagined, slowly rotting beneath the ancient trees, guarded by whatever nameless entity had claimed that desolate patch of land. Stake: Lily0211 This is based on a true story I experienced when I was a child. The sun was a lazy, hazy orb in the afternoon sky, casting long, distorted shadows as I ventured towards the old, abandoned house on the outskirts of our province. Everyone knew its story – or rather, its lack of a story. It had stood vacant for decades, windows like vacant eyesores, paint peeling like sunburnt skin. Locals whispered about its silence, its unnatural stillness, but no one ever claimed a haunting, just a profound sense of abandonment. My mission that day was simpler, less morbid: mangoes. The house was surrounded by ancient mango trees, their branches heavy with ripe fruit that often dropped to the overgrown grass below. It was an easy haul, and a delicious one. I moved quietly, scanning the ground, picking up the perfectly ripe, sun-warmed 'ripe' mangoes, their sweetness already a promise on my tongue. I had filled my basket halfway, a contented hum on my lips, when it happened. It wasn't a whisper, nor a shout. It was a voice, ragged and dry, like autumn leaves skittering across forgotten graves. It seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere, a vibration in the very air around me. "Go away," it rasped, low and guttural. "Go away." My heart seized in my chest. I froze, basket clutched tight, every muscle in my body tensed. I knew, with absolute certainty, that there was no one in that house. I had explored it as a curious child, finding only dust, decay, and the faint scent of forgotten lives. No squatters, no vagrants, just emptiness. Yet, the voice hung in the air, thick and cold. I didn't dare look towards the house, fearing what I might see, or worse, what I might not see. The silence that followed felt heavier than the voice itself, pregnant with an unseen presence. My instincts screamed. Without another thought, without even daring a backward glance, I dropped the basket of precious mangoes and ran. I ran like the wind itself was at my heels, like the unseen voice was a tangible shadow pursuing me through the tangled undergrowth. I didn't stop until the familiar safety of our village homes came into view, my lungs burning, my pulse thrumming a frantic rhythm in my ears. I never went back. Not for the mangoes, not for idle curiosity, not even for a fleeting glimpse of the house that had always just been 'abandoned.' Now, it was something else entirely. It was the place where a voice had warned me, a voice from the void, a voice that turned a simple afternoon into a terror I would carry long after the sun had set. The mangoes remained, I imagined, slowly rotting beneath the ancient trees, guarded by whatever nameless entity had claimed that desolate patch of land. Stake: Lily0211
  9. Cash wash Stake: Lily0211
  10. 2 tiles Stake: Lily0211
  11. sport:458639448
  12. 1.50x Stake: Lily0211
  13. 1.13 2. Adam Henrique 3. 0 4. Edmonton Oilers 5. Edmonton Oilers 6.9th minute Stake: Lily0211
  14. Anybody here who hit the 10,000x in packs? How many bets did you hit it?
  15. Hounds of Hell Stake: Lily0211
  16. Low Stake: Lily0211
  17. 1.4rth quarter 2. Over 3. Even 4.Serbia Stake: lily0211
  18. Bet ID: 112,079,113,081 Stake: Lily0211
  19. 1. 6 2. Lamine Yamal 3. 3 4. Spain Stake: Lily0211
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