Killing a random vatnik - 6 points Destroying rocket launcher machine - 50 points etc Best Ukrainian operator unit - 16 000+ points Points comes with rewards, that can be used to order (,,buy'') specific drones for specific units, this way ensuring that the most effective units gets what they need on time. ,, Amazon for soldiers '' Soldiers being soldiers / units, compete amongst each other, to score the best hits.
Reminds me of MechCommander and a couple of other games. I guess it's an effective way to get soldiers to go the extra mile. Distasteful? Sure, but so is war. Russia can leave whenever.
Even if it's a slight manipulation disguised as a game, - whatever helps to delete more vatniks. The unlucky units tho, might be cut short in the points system, if it's a more peaceful spot etc. Meanwhile, few top - drone operators, would do well, to share their knowledge back at Kiev with fresh recruits as instructors. Ain't no such books yet, that will teach you about the tricks that they mastered and saw. p.s let's hope there are bonus points for hitting an orc with washing machine. p.p.s if you're in those kind of games, you might like : w ww.youtube.com/watch?v=nrUussD9ilw
Missing brains, eyes, internal organs gone, bruises all over the body, especially on feet (due electrocution). https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...yna-ukrainian-journalist-death-russian-prison ‘Numerous signs of torture’: a Ukrainian journalist’s detention and death in Russian prison The Guardian, working with media partners, has tracked down first-hand accounts to reconstruct Viktoriia Roshchyna’s final months By Juliette Garside, Shaun Walker, Manisha Ganguly, Pjotr Sauer, Tetyana Nikolayenko, Anton Naumliuk and Artem Mazhulin The exchange took place on a lonely forest road in February. Moving along a line of refrigerated lorries, the teams in hazmat suits went about their grim work: preparing the remains of 757 Ukrainian military casualties handed over by Russia for the journey back to Kyiv. Clipboards in hand, intermediaries from the Red Cross checked their lists. For each body shrouded in white plastic, the Russians had provided a number, a name, a location, sometimes a cause of death. And then, at the very bottom of the last page, a mystery entry: “NM SPAS 757.” The letters were abbreviations, taken to mean “unidentified man” and “extensive damage to the coronary arteries”. It would be weeks before officials could confirm what the Guardian and its reporting partners are publishing today. The unlabelled remains were those of a woman. Not a soldier, either, but one of the most high-profile civilians detained since the full-scale invasion. The journalist Viktoriia Roshchyna was captured in the summer of 2023 near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station. It was at least her fourth reporting trip into the occupied territories. She was by this stage of the war the only Ukrainian journalist prepared to risk crossing the frontline in order to pierce the information blackout imposed by Russia. Roshchyna died after a year in detention, aged 27. Information on the circumstances of her death is limited. Roshchyna was held without charge and without access to a lawyer. During her detention, her only known contact with the outside world was a four-minute phone call to her parents, a full year after she was taken.
You know things are going badly when Putin has to start with the nuclear threats again.The fact that Russia needs Nuclear weapons to defeat Ukraine shows what a weak and pathetic country they are. https://www.politico.eu/article/mos...dimir-putin-nuclear-weapons-ceasefire-russia/
Someone needs to remind Putin that all of his next generation missiles have failed disastrously when tested and his aging, unmaintained nuclear warheads are unlikely to go "boom".