User:Drek'TharSuperSword

THANK YOU GUYS FOR SUPPORTING ME 2 B A FORUM MOD!!!!!!!!!!

About the R eal G uy
I'm R. Giskeel (Don't ask me my REAL name!!!), and if you ask why do my name is like that, it's because it's actually a character from Bookworm Adventures 2 (an anagram game made by PopCap in 2009, almost at the same time the original PvZ released)

BTW, the reason why do I set the birth date to march 14 is because it's actually wikipedia:Albert_Einstein|Albert Einstein's birthday date...

THANKS GUYS FOR SUPPORTING ME TO BE A FORUM MOD!!!!!!!

Gallery of R andom G ags!
These are some pictures from c. 2013-early 2014, taken by myself. Also some definite proof that I was a CHATMOD. Now PLEASE SUPPORT ME FOR FORUM MODERATOR!!! (link above)

Useless stuff of R andom G iggles!
Literally: an addon for Chrome that changes every single "literally" to figuratively, even these and the above one (...was literally...a chatmod...)! LOL. Click here

Some words that I found out pretty uncommon...
*userpage clutter detected!!!* Here are some words from Wikipedia that turns out to be pretty uncommon. Some of them aren't valid in Bookworm Adventures 2 though.
 * Perplex (verb)
 * Ascertain (verb)
 * Affidavit (noun)
 * Unfetter (verb)
 * Auspice (noun)
 * Pernicious (adjective)
 * Precocious (adjective)
 * etc...

Did you know something about R unning G uy?
Most of the sources are from How To Geek.


 * The Kawah Ijen Lake in Indonesia (Yay!) is the world’s largest sulfuric acid lake and has a pH value of ‘0.5’.


 * Coca-Cola is sold in every country on Earth except Cuba and North Korea.


 * Despite the widely propagated belief that throwing rice at weddings poses a danger to birds, the rice is harmless.


 * The ill-fated New Coke recipe of the mid 1980s was a retooling of Coca-Cola’s Diet Coke recipe with high fructose corn syrup added in and a slightly different balance of ingredients.


 * Enough solar energy falls on the Earth during a single week to power the entire planet’s power grid for a century.


 * Although the Lord of the Rings trilogy has approximately 3 billion dollars in profit, none of that money has gone to the Tolkien estate; J.R.R. Tolkien sold the movie rights to his literary opus in 1969 for £10,000 (~$16,578.50 USD).