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There was a lot of surprise when聽Star Wars Outlaws was first announced. An open-world game With a smuggler protagonist Set during a really interesting period of the Original Trilogy Also, is that droid聽really hot or what No one could ;ve possibly expected that the announcement of a new big-budget聽Star Wars game could get overshadowed by the internet falling for a Commando Droid in a trench coat鈥搇east of all the team behind Outlaws. Anyone who tells you this was anticipated is lying, Navid Khavari told GamesHub recently about the unlikely reaction to ND-5, the unexpected latest hottie of the Star Wars gaming universe. I feel very confident in saying that. I still remember, on announce, the tweets started to pop up and I texted [Jay Rincon, the actor behind ND-5] like Jay, get ready. A former Commando Droid in the Clone War, in聽Outlaws ND-5 becomes a close confidant of Kay Vess, the game protagonist. Learned in the ways of the criminal underworld, ND-5 protective but gruff persona in early footage鈥揳s well as the striki
stanley cup ng silhouette he cuts, his lithe battle droid frame compleme
stanley coffee mug nted by a long, flowing trench coat鈥搈ade him an instant hit online. The word sexy, or anything like that, it was never used [in development], Rincon
stanley cup becher said of establishing the character. The artwork was brilliant, I was blown away when I first saw it and obviously that helped lead and guide what we ultimately have come up with鈥?but theres nothing sexy about sitting in the Xwlx Democrats Climate Message Isn t Connecting With Latinos鈥擝ut It Could
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stanley hrnek tty ImagesBy Alice ParkFebruary 16, 2015 12:01 AM ESTUp to a third of teens in the U.S. donrsquo;t get enough sleep each n
stanley cups ight, and the loss of shut-eye negatively impacts their grades, mental well-being and physical health. Biologically, adolescents need fewer hours of slumber than kids mdash; but there a bigger reason for teens ; sleep loss, according to a new study in the journal Pediatrics.MORE: The Power of SleepKatherine Keyes, an assistant professor of epidemiology at Columbia University, looked at survey data from more than 270,000 eighth-, 10th- and 12th-grade students at 130 public and private schools across the country, gathered between 1991 and 2010. Each student was asked two questions about his or her sleep habits: how often they slept for at least seven hours a night, and how often they slept less than they should.MORE: School Should Start Later So Teens Can Sleep, Urge DoctorsShe found that over the 20-year study period, adolescents got less and less sleep. Part of that had to do with the fact that biologically, teens sleep less the older they get, but Keyes and her team also teased apart a peri
stanley termos od effect mdash; meaning there were forces affecting all the students, at every age, that contributed to their sleeping fewer hours. This led to a marked drop in the average number of adolescents reporting at least seven hours of sleep nightly between 1991ndash;1995 and 1996ndash;2000.That surprised Keyes, who expected to find sharpe