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Gay beam

Gay Romance

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Weapons & Equip - LGBT-BEAM-BLASTER - Rainbow Gun Upgrade

Rexsilion26 said:

- IDEA -

I've had this idea in my head for a while now, and today I decided to post it.
The Rainbow Gun is a very fun weapon, probably the most iconic of the dungeon Biome Chests.
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But the Rainbow Gun is not very used due to the way it fires its beam.
That's why I think an upgrade would do this gun a lot of good.
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The name I came up with for this upgrade is LGBT-BEAM-BLASTER.
Perhaps the name is too big?
____________________

- LGBT-BEAM-BLASTER -

The LGBT-BEAM-BLASTER fires a large and dominant beam which takes 3 seconds to full charge.
At the beginning of the charge, the weapon will fire a petty beam that will flourish exponentially in size and damage.
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Base damage: 230 (magic damage)
Knockback: (very weak)
Mana consume: 35
____________________

What do you think of the idea?​

Click to expand...

I feel love this is just a stronger Last Prism, and the title is a little out of place (nothing wrong with organism LGBT, just that the reference is a petite out there)

Weapons similar to other weapons are pleasant to suggest, and upgrades too, but I just don

Joseph Beam audio and moving image collection

1987- circa 1991

Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Joseph Fairchild Beam (December 30, 1954 - December 27, 1988) was a gay rights activist, journalist, and poet. Beam received a BA from Franklin College in 1976. In the early 1980s, he began working at Giovanni's Room, an independent male lover and lesbian bookstore in Philadelphia. His writings appeared in numerous gay and literary publications including The Advocate, The Body Politic, Gay Community News, Novel York Native, Painted Bride Quarterly, Philadelphia Gay News, and Windy City Times. In 1984, the Womxn loving womxn and Gay Press Association awarded Beam a certificate for outstanding achievement by a minority journalist. In 1985, he became a consultant to the Homosexual and Lesbian Task Press of the American Friends Service Committee, a Religious Society of Friends (Quaker)-founded organization working for harmony and social justice in the US and around the world. That identical year, Beam joined the executive committee of the National Coalition of Jet Lesbians and Gays, and became the editor of its journal, Black/Out. He was also awarded the Philadelphia Gay News Lambda Literary Award

Gay, Inc. by Myrl Beam

G

eographers of neoliberalism have drawn-out inquired into the revolutionary potential and the serious limitations of what INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence (2017) has called the “nonprofit industrial complex” and Jennifer Wolch (1990) has called the “shadow state.” Likewise, geographers of sexuality have long critically evaluated the neoliberal change in gender and sexual politics (e.g. Puar 2006, Oswin 2008, Brown 2012). But few scholars acquire situated that neoliberal change within the form of the nonprofit-industrial complex in as sustained and persuasive a manner as Myrl Beam in Gay, Inc.: The Nonprofitization of Homosexual Politics. Grounded in Beam’s experiences of frontline function and careful inquiry into the history and political economy of LGBTQ nonprofits in Chicago and Minneapolis, this book offers a persuasive indictment of the nonprofit form, as adv as a deeply felt mediation on how savvy grassroots organizers struggle with its constraints.

Gay, Inc. should command the attention of geographers of neoliberalism, the third sector, health, gender, sexuality, class, and race in and well beyond the United States. This forum is based on a conversation that

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gay beam