@limbatrip: 幽体離脱前進おじさん コマ数を1/2にすることで幽体感を出すことに成功しました。

LimbaTrip
LimbaTrip
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Region: JP
Wednesday 23 July 2025 12:28:50 GMT
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19_southpaw_77
SouthPaw77 :
awesome sauce
2025-07-26 05:04:53
0
9_cosmic
COSMIC💫✨ :
As within so is without
2025-07-24 16:52:28
0
nina_marina_marocas
nina_Marina :
genius
2025-07-25 10:38:08
0
jhamandas804
جھ۔۔۔۔🫀💛🌹 :
from Pakistan
2025-07-23 19:09:37
0
golgo6.5
golgon :
これも面白いなー🤣🤣🤣
2025-07-26 05:26:14
0
icanttalktowomen
Eldar :
😂😂😂
2025-07-25 02:59:03
0
user2170797239683
رحمتك يارب :
😶🤔
2025-07-24 22:08:24
0
yaneth.ramirez56
Yaneth Ramirez :
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
2025-07-23 22:55:41
0
davidhouis
davidhouis :
😁😁😁
2025-07-23 12:43:59
0
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Other Videos

In the early 2000s, Porsche Design—known for crafting everything from aviator sunglasses to titanium pens—decided to enter the luxury personal care space with a line of high-end soaps. These weren’t your average hotel bars. Crafted with dense, almost metallic ingredients and housed in sleek chrome-like packaging, the soap was marketed as a “fusion of performance and purity”—a nod to the Porsche design ethos. The aesthetic matched the industrial, high-gloss vibe of Porsche rims and dashboards. It was positioned as a lifestyle object for the brand’s diehard fans—something to keep next to your Carrera keys and brushed aluminum toothbrush holder. However, things didn’t exactly go as planned. The soap, while visually striking, turned out to be functionally problematic. Users reported that the bar was so dense and slick, it would often slip out of their hands, crashing noisily (and sometimes denting) porcelain sinks. The irony wasn’t lost on consumers: Porsche had engineered a bar of soap that was arguably too well-machined to perform its basic duty. Even more surprising, the formulation’s hard, polishable surface occasionally left faint scratches on delicate countertops or tiles. The complaints didn’t come in droves, but they came from exactly the kind of discerning, detail-obsessed clientele Porsche tends to attract—people who notice if a seam is misaligned or a brushed finish is too coarse. Ultimately, Porsche Design quietly phased out the soap product after a few quarters. It never made it to widespread distribution in U.S. department stores and remained mostly a novelty item in Europe and parts of Asia. Still, the “Porsche Soap Incident,” as some fans jokingly call it, lives on in niche car forums and lifestyle blogs as a cautionary tale about designing for form over function. It also serves as a curious moment in the brand’s history when Porsche applied its precision-obsessed engineering philosophy to a personal hygiene product—and learned the hard way that even luxury bars of soap still need to lather. #kotc #kingofthecurve #fyp #college #school
In the early 2000s, Porsche Design—known for crafting everything from aviator sunglasses to titanium pens—decided to enter the luxury personal care space with a line of high-end soaps. These weren’t your average hotel bars. Crafted with dense, almost metallic ingredients and housed in sleek chrome-like packaging, the soap was marketed as a “fusion of performance and purity”—a nod to the Porsche design ethos. The aesthetic matched the industrial, high-gloss vibe of Porsche rims and dashboards. It was positioned as a lifestyle object for the brand’s diehard fans—something to keep next to your Carrera keys and brushed aluminum toothbrush holder. However, things didn’t exactly go as planned. The soap, while visually striking, turned out to be functionally problematic. Users reported that the bar was so dense and slick, it would often slip out of their hands, crashing noisily (and sometimes denting) porcelain sinks. The irony wasn’t lost on consumers: Porsche had engineered a bar of soap that was arguably too well-machined to perform its basic duty. Even more surprising, the formulation’s hard, polishable surface occasionally left faint scratches on delicate countertops or tiles. The complaints didn’t come in droves, but they came from exactly the kind of discerning, detail-obsessed clientele Porsche tends to attract—people who notice if a seam is misaligned or a brushed finish is too coarse. Ultimately, Porsche Design quietly phased out the soap product after a few quarters. It never made it to widespread distribution in U.S. department stores and remained mostly a novelty item in Europe and parts of Asia. Still, the “Porsche Soap Incident,” as some fans jokingly call it, lives on in niche car forums and lifestyle blogs as a cautionary tale about designing for form over function. It also serves as a curious moment in the brand’s history when Porsche applied its precision-obsessed engineering philosophy to a personal hygiene product—and learned the hard way that even luxury bars of soap still need to lather. #kotc #kingofthecurve #fyp #college #school

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