This is the shootout we have all experienced before.
香港觀眾留言有機會抽到巜特務打爆機》戲飛!
1080 HD Link: https://youtu.be/GcAjddLxdwU
#中二病 #童年回憶 #Finger #Gun #Fight #Battle #War #LowBudget #LowCost #DIY #GamesEffect #嚴正化 #朴星雄 #裴正南 #特務打爆機 #OKMADAM #staycation #flycation #오케이마담 #edkofilms
Games Effect Pixel Lo Chemain Lo Sheena Lo 6個點 哈嘯 Van仔 Edko Films Ltd. 安樂影片
同時也有3部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過71萬的網紅風傳媒 The Storm Media,也在其Youtube影片中提到,相信頭文字D是不少年輕人的共同回憶回憶吧?一提起這4個字一提到這4個字,肯定能喚起不少經典的畫面。香港創作者Games Effect利用在學校能找到的工具,神還原頭文字D的經典賽車動畫場景!令網友不禁驚呼:「超級逼真!」、「構思太棒了!」。一起來看看,喚起你的頭文字D魂吧! 影片授權: Games...
「games effect香港」的推薦目錄:
- 關於games effect香港 在 Games Effect Facebook 的最佳貼文
- 關於games effect香港 在 Games Effect Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於games effect香港 在 肯腦濕的人生相談室 Facebook 的最讚貼文
- 關於games effect香港 在 風傳媒 The Storm Media Youtube 的最佳解答
- 關於games effect香港 在 麻甩重工 Youtube 的最讚貼文
- 關於games effect香港 在 Ordinary Gaming Studio平民遊戲工作室 Youtube 的最佳貼文
- 關於games effect香港 在 Games Effect - 來自香港的早晨!!!... 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 Games Effect 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 games effect算唔算香港YouTube channel最成功轉型 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 [純討論]香港粵語遊戲頻道- 直播及Youtuber 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 玩具模型 - 香港YouTube Channel 目錄 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 時機輪椅製造(香港)有限公司 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 YouTube 達人教路Xbox 打機拍片贏美國E3 之旅 - PCM 的評價
- 關於games effect香港 在 香港講ACGN的網台/youtube 頻道@ ~清談館 的評價
games effect香港 在 Games Effect Facebook 的最讚貼文
The cardboard virus has caused a cardboard zombie outbreak! For Hong Kong viewers, feel free to leave a comment below to win “Peninsula” movie tickets for free! 近日有紙皮病毒入侵,感染者會變成紙皮喪屍!香港觀眾留言就有機會抽中免費《屍殺半島》戲飛!
憑証可於2020年7月22日起,到香港上映《屍殺半島》之百老匯院線戲院換取戲票一張,電影放映期間之有效期內通用。
1080 HD Link: https://youtu.be/XvV5qkFW6GU
#屍殺半島 #屍殺列車 #Peninsula #TrainToBusan #반도 #부산행 #EdkoFilm #中二病 #童年回憶 #Fight #Battle #War #LowBudget #LowCost #DIY #GamesEffect #zombie
Games Effect Pixel Lo Chemain Lo Sheena Lo 6個點 哈嘯 Van仔 Edko Films Ltd. 安樂影片
games effect香港 在 肯腦濕的人生相談室 Facebook 的最讚貼文
經濟學人的封面,圖片是龍的嘴咬向香港,爪子伸向台灣
中國在香港用恐懼來統治
全世界應該感到擔憂
https://www.economist.com/…/china-has-launched-rule-by-fear…
Dragon strike
China has launched rule by fear in Hong Kong
The rest of the world should worry, too
The people of Hong Kong want two things: to choose how they are governed, and to be subject to the rule of law. The Chinese Communist Party finds both ideas so frightening that many expected it to send troops to crush last year’s vast protests in Hong Kong. Instead, it bided its time. Now, with the world distracted by covid-19 and mass protests difficult because of social distancing, it has chosen a quieter way to show who’s boss. That threatens a broader reckoning with the world—and not just over Hong Kong, but also over the South China Sea and Taiwan.
On May 21st China declared, in effect, that Hong Kongers deemed to pose a threat to the party will become subject to the party’s wrath. A new security law, written in Beijing, will create still-to-be defined crimes of subversion and secession, terms used elsewhere in China to lock up dissidents, including Uighurs and Tibetans. Hong Kong will have no say in drafting the law, which will let China station its secret police there. The message is clear. Rule by fear is about to begin.
This is the most flagrant violation yet of the principle of “one country, two systems”. When the British colony was handed back to China in 1997, China agreed that Hong Kong would enjoy a “high degree of autonomy”, including impartial courts and free speech. Many Hong Kongers are outraged (see article). Some investors are scared, too. The territory’s stockmarket fell by 5.6% on May 22nd, its biggest drop in five years. Hong Kong is a global commercial hub not only because it is situated next to the Chinese mainland, but also because it enjoys the rule of law. Business disputes are settled impartially, by rules that are known in advance. If China’s unaccountable enforcers are free to impose the party’s whims in Hong Kong, it will be a less attractive place for global firms to operate.
China’s move also has implications far beyond Hong Kong. “One country, two systems” was supposed to be a model for Taiwan, a democratic island of 24m that China also sees as its own. The aim was to show that reunification with the motherland need not mean losing one’s liberty. Under President Xi Jinping, China seems to have tired of this charade. Increasingly, it is making bare-knuckle threats instead. The re-election in January of a China-sceptic Taiwanese president, Tsai Ing-wen, will have convinced China’s rulers that the chances of a peaceful reunification are vanishingly small. On May 22nd, at the opening of China’s rubber-stamp parliament, the prime minister, Li Keqiang, ominously cut the word “peaceful” from his ritual reference to reunification. China has stepped up war games around Taiwan and its nationalists have been braying online for an invasion.
China is at odds with other countries, too. In its building of island fortresses in the South China Sea, it ignores both international law and the claims of smaller neighbours. This week hundreds, perhaps thousands of Chinese troops crossed China’s disputed border with India in the Himalayas. Minor scuffles along this frontier are common, but the latest incursion came as a state-owned Chinese paper asserted new claims to land that its nuclear-armed neighbour deems Indian (see article). And, as a sombre backdrop to all this, relations with the United States are worse than they have been in decades, poisoning everything from trade and investment to scientific collaboration.
However much all the regional muscle-flexing appals the world, it makes sense to the Chinese Communist Party. In Hong Kong the party wants to stop a “colour revolution”, which it thinks could bring democrats to power there despite China’s best efforts to rig the system. If eroding Hong Kong’s freedoms causes economic damage, so be it, party bigwigs reason. The territory is still an important place for Chinese firms to raise international capital, especially since the Sino-American feud makes it harder and riskier for them to do so in New York. But Hong Kong’s gdp is equivalent to only 3% of mainland China’s now, down from more than 18% in 1997, because the mainland’s economy has grown 15-fold since then. China’s rulers assume that multinational firms and banks will keep a base in Hong Kong, simply to be near the vast Chinese market. They are probably right.
The simple picture that President Donald Trump paints of America and China locked in confrontation suits China’s rulers well. The party thinks that the balance of power is shifting in China’s favour. Mr Trump’s insults feed Chinese nationalist anger, which the party is delighted to exploit—just as it does any tensions between America and its allies. It portrays the democracy movement in Hong Kong as an American plot. That is absurd, but it helps explain many mainlanders’ scorn for Hong Kong’s protesters.
The rest of the world should stand up to China’s bullying. On the Sino-Indian border, the two sides should talk more to avoid miscalculations, as their leaders promised to in 2018. China should realise that, if it tries the tactics it has used in the South China Sea, building structures on disputed ground and daring others to push back, it will be viewed with greater distrust by all its neighbours.
In the case of Taiwan China faces a powerful deterrent: a suggestion in American law that America might come to Taiwan’s aid were the island to be attacked. There is a growing risk that a cocksure China may decide to put that to the test. America should make clear that doing so would be extremely dangerous. America’s allies should echo that, loudly.
Hong Kong’s options are bleaker. The Hong Kong Policy Act requires America to certify annually that the territory should in trade and other matters be treated as separate from China. This week the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, declared that “facts on the ground” show Hong Kong is no longer autonomous. This allows America to slap tariffs on the territory’s exports, as it already does to those from the mainland. That is a powerful weapon, but the scope for miscalculation is vast, potentially harming Hong Kongers and driving out global firms and banks. It would be better, as the law also proposes, to impose sanctions on officials who abuse human rights in Hong Kong. Also, Britain should grant full residency rights to the hundreds of thousands of Hong Kongers who hold a kind of second-class British passport—much as Ms Tsai this week opened Taiwan’s door to Hong Kong citizens. None of this will stop China from imposing its will on Hong Kong. The party’s interests always trump the people’s. ■
games effect香港 在 風傳媒 The Storm Media Youtube 的最佳解答
相信頭文字D是不少年輕人的共同回憶回憶吧?一提起這4個字一提到這4個字,肯定能喚起不少經典的畫面。香港創作者Games Effect利用在學校能找到的工具,神還原頭文字D的經典賽車動畫場景!令網友不禁驚呼:「超級逼真!」、「構思太棒了!」。一起來看看,喚起你的頭文字D魂吧!
影片授權: Games Effect (https://youtu.be/ANxSlnjBrVI)
✓ 點我加入《風傳媒》Line 好友(ID:@dyp8323m) http://bit.ly/2hETgWE
✓ 點我訂閱《風傳媒》YouTube 頻道 http://bit.ly/2grkAJ6
✓ 點我追蹤《下班經濟學》IG頻道(ID:@worked_money) https://bit.ly/2WZ1Dnb
✓ 點我加入《下班經濟學》telegram頻道 https://t.me/storm_money
【Facebook粉絲團】
風傳媒►► https://www.facebook.com/stormmedia
風生活►► https://www.facebook.com/SMediaLife
下班經濟學►►https://www.facebook.com/workedmoney
games effect香港 在 麻甩重工 Youtube 的最讚貼文
#報告廠長 #麻甩重工
全新系列報告廠長終於係4月尾剪好3月號,明白資訊性會唔夠update, 學我地嘅林太講請大家多多包容下?
黎緊報告廠長會以雙週形式發放。
希望大家會鍾意呢類型嘅片,再次多謝Jack @數碼捕籠 同 林仔 @Lau Kin Lam - 林仔 嘅付出同各位觀眾嘅耐心等待。
=========================================================
麻甩 IG: https://www.instagram.com/malade_indu...
Reggie IG: https://www.instagram.com/regggiesan
希治閣 IG: https://www.instagram.com/hitch_oilking
水哥 IG: https://www.instagram.com/water.mhc
伍憶 IG: https://www.instagram.com/zx1994118
家樂 IG: https://www.instagram.com/_louischan0311
games effect香港 在 Ordinary Gaming Studio平民遊戲工作室 Youtube 的最佳貼文
這次不是正式的評價
因為我對這遊戲實在無感
所以沒有辦法給出能稱為評價的總結
不過我還是想分享一下個人的想法
話說卡比吃那麼多人,當成小兒向遊戲真的好嗎......
games effect香港 在 Games Effect 的推薦與評價
來自香港的早晨!!! 由於我哋最近嘅片得到海外觀眾嘅關注同埋有好多唔同國家嘅人問我哋叫乜春~ 所以就諗住用呢張圖去介紹返我哋"中二病!"系列嘅成員! ... <看更多>
games effect香港 在 games effect算唔算香港YouTube channel最成功轉型 的推薦與評價
由以前做game新聞好霉得一兩萬人睇,到而家拍d 中二病系列下下都幾十萬人睇好掛住之前嘅ge. ... <看更多>
games effect香港 在 Games Effect - 來自香港的早晨!!!... 的推薦與評價
來自香港的早晨!!! 由於我哋最近嘅片得到海外觀眾嘅關注同埋有好多唔同國家嘅人問我哋叫乜春~ 所以就諗住用呢張圖去介紹返我哋"中二病!"系列嘅成員! ... <看更多>