Most people are under the impression that in a lifetime of love, it’s either hit or miss.
Love is like trying to aim those damn photon torpedoes into the exhaust port of the Death Star. Near impossible, life endangering but all you know is that you need it to survive. But here’s a most interesting fact about love.
I heard that, in a human lifetime, approximately 10,000 people can fall in love with one person. That’s a hell of a lot of love to go around. So that’s a good thing! But most people prefer not to share their significant other with anyone else. So this little known fact that at least 10,000 other men/women will want to love my girlfriend just as much as I do is curious, because it will happen. Of this fact there is no doubt. However, we all have something going for ourselves in the game of love. It’s called our fingerprints. Nobody in the galactic universe has the same one. And so if someone can distill their feelings into loving a person’s fingerprint; then that’s a match made in space. I just hope that if we’re still together in the future and I’m ready to marry her, that the first question won’t be, “Will You Marry Me?” it’ll be “Will you love this fingerprint?”
(Source: skintones, via goodbyegoodnight)
This is a very rare game about a man and his small circle of friends. It only came out in Japan. Only 50k copies of the game exist and it is hard to come by. I took these screenshots from my emulator.
(via goodbyegoodnight)

(Source: ardurp, via goodbyegoodnight)

Young Alan Turing (age 16) - founder of computer science, helped win World War II by decrypting the german coding machine Enigma. After the war he was tried in court for being gay, found guilty, forced to take castration pills, and then driven to commit suicide.
Plane amazing! This World War II-era fighter plane was discovered recently in the Sahara Desert.
The Kittyhawk P-40 is believed to have come down in June 1942 after Royal Air Force Flight Sgt. Dennis Copping, 24, bailed out, according to England’s Daily Telegraph newspaper. He was never seen again.
The downed plane was found in a remote region in western Egypt — some 200 miles from the nearest town — by a Polish oil company worker. British military historian Andy Saunders called it “the aviation equivalent of Tutankhamun’s tomb.”