Weekly Fun: Cyberpunk 2077 Memes and Absurd Illustrations From Textbooks
Every week, our editorial team dugs up the funniest and the most ridiculous bits of news and prepares a compilation of life stories and situations, chucklesome videos, amusing texts, memes, and a variety of jokes and wisecracks to make you grin from ear to ear. Reading our selection of Weekly Fun stuff without a doubt equals having a whale of a time.
Possum pushed a skunk into a pond
In New York, a camera trap got some interesting shots. A Virginia possum pushed a striped skunk into a pond. None of the animals was ultimately harmed, but the reason for this behavior of the possum is unclear. Perhaps he just wanted to play. According to another theory, it was a pregnant female who saw the skunk as a threat to her offspring, so she decided to quickly get rid of a competitor.
Cyberpunk 2077 memes
Cyberpunk 2077 was released quite recently and has already presented the world with new memes. At the very beginning, the player can choose the backstory of the protagonist: Nomad, Street Kid, and Corpo. Each of the roles influences the plot in its own way, opens up access to different dialogues, and even the possibilities of relationships with different characters in the game. The backstory selection window has become an excellent template for memes, because almost any person, especially actors, can be "decomposed" into three stories.
During the first days after the release, players faced a huge number of bugs: cars could appear out of thin air and drive over fences, the faces of some characters became solid soap, quests were not closed, AI could freeze at any moment, and Keanu Reeves' character, Johnny Silverhand, smoked a cigarette that hung in the air.
Twitter of the month: a collection of absurd illustrations from textbooks
A 15-year-old Colorado high school student named Luke created Science Diagrams that Look Like Shitposts accounts on Twitter and Facebook this January. In them, he publishes illustrations taken out of context from textbooks and scientific works, which are so absurd that they look like post-ironic memes.