@yohanbook: je déconne....... (sauf pour master duel) nn en vrai ya des gens cool🙂‍↕️#yugioh #genz #ftm

le furry du booktok📚
le furry du booktok📚
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Region: FR
Friday 25 July 2025 22:42:16 GMT
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stan.lunaire
PunkInMyVeins :
Stylé le tattoo
2025-07-29 14:07:56
1
en_vrai_de_vrai
en_vrai_de_vrai :
l'argent que j'ai pu dépenser pour avoir une seul carte parfois j'y repense
2025-07-29 08:23:31
1
samyart2004
samyart2004 :
Pour être un joueur pokemon, magic commander et Yugioh, je trouve que la commu est pas si toxic que ça, en tout cas de mon expérience je la ressens pas
2025-07-26 02:23:40
1
charatheundying
Oyasumi :
olala mais du goût dis donc, c'est trop bien ygo 0-0
2025-07-26 01:03:37
1
tiloupthebad
Tiloup :
voilà on préfère norm des Loci solairgraine nous !
2025-07-26 01:40:37
1
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Other Videos

Cassey Ho (@cassey) was getting her roots dyed when she started receiving hundreds of ecstatic messages. In a video clip promoting her song “Fortnight,” Taylor Swift was shown wearing the Pirouette Skort, a flouncy, tutu-style skirt with built-in shorts underneath, that Ho had designed for her athleisure brand Popflex. She knew immediately this exposure — one of the world’s biggest pop stars, flaunting Ho’s design — would be life-changing. “I am just numb. I can’t even scream, I can’t even speak,” she recalls of the moment she realized what was happening. “I am just dead.” Even though it appeared for literally one second in Swift’s video, that brief moment caused the entire inventory of thousands of skorts to be snapped up within an hour, and a week later, over 10,000 customers had placed preorders for the product (to date, Popflex has sold over 50,000 Pirouette Skorts in total). Then came the dupes. The Popflex skort caught the attention of a more ominous group: imitators, or more precisely, companies churning out look-alikes of popular clothing items. Within weeks, Pirouette Skort copies — mesh ruffles, drawstring waistband, pastel colors and all — had flooded the web. More than a year later, they haven’t stopped. And there is not much Ho, who built a fitness empire around her popular YouTube channel, can do about it, even as someone with a large and recognizable platform. Living among copies of something else is as ordinary an experience as scrolling past three of the same posts, one after another, on any given social media site. The similitude of consumers’ options has even upended certain corners of the legal system, where intellectual property rights holders are trying to fight the speed and scale of the internet with their own — at times flawed — versions of the same. It is dupes all the way down. Read more from @Mia Sato - tech reporter at the link in our bio. Illustration by Ryan Haskins Images: Trader Joes, Popflex Design: Cath Virginia
Cassey Ho (@cassey) was getting her roots dyed when she started receiving hundreds of ecstatic messages. In a video clip promoting her song “Fortnight,” Taylor Swift was shown wearing the Pirouette Skort, a flouncy, tutu-style skirt with built-in shorts underneath, that Ho had designed for her athleisure brand Popflex. She knew immediately this exposure — one of the world’s biggest pop stars, flaunting Ho’s design — would be life-changing. “I am just numb. I can’t even scream, I can’t even speak,” she recalls of the moment she realized what was happening. “I am just dead.” Even though it appeared for literally one second in Swift’s video, that brief moment caused the entire inventory of thousands of skorts to be snapped up within an hour, and a week later, over 10,000 customers had placed preorders for the product (to date, Popflex has sold over 50,000 Pirouette Skorts in total). Then came the dupes. The Popflex skort caught the attention of a more ominous group: imitators, or more precisely, companies churning out look-alikes of popular clothing items. Within weeks, Pirouette Skort copies — mesh ruffles, drawstring waistband, pastel colors and all — had flooded the web. More than a year later, they haven’t stopped. And there is not much Ho, who built a fitness empire around her popular YouTube channel, can do about it, even as someone with a large and recognizable platform. Living among copies of something else is as ordinary an experience as scrolling past three of the same posts, one after another, on any given social media site. The similitude of consumers’ options has even upended certain corners of the legal system, where intellectual property rights holders are trying to fight the speed and scale of the internet with their own — at times flawed — versions of the same. It is dupes all the way down. Read more from @Mia Sato - tech reporter at the link in our bio. Illustration by Ryan Haskins Images: Trader Joes, Popflex Design: Cath Virginia

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