There’s nothing wrong with not knowing everything. But not wanting to learn is the issue.
2 months ago | 38
And so it twas, the sacred documents of forbidden knowledge was released on a Warthunder forum yet again (mystical old guy voice)
2 months ago | 22
I’ve been preaching this for a long time. Some people think I know almost everything but it’s really because my dad taught me how to learn, I learned just how a lot of things work and now I know how to figure things out
2 months ago | 2
Man if only I could apply this to Naval. No matter how much I try to understand the fundamentals and master the way leading works, Im gonna miss that city-sized island of a boat a mere 10Km away...
2 months ago (edited) | 15
The only thing i really know is that i love the Salty tears from the Sim Zombers when i play my fighter jet <3
2 months ago (edited) | 2
“Success is not final; failure is not fatal: It is the courage to continue that counts.” —Winston Churchill
2 months ago | 21
The best part about gaining knowledge is that the more you learn, the more you realize how little knowledge you have.
2 months ago | 1
Your saying once I break my emersion and play the game like I'm trying to decode a bank vault, then I'll get good?
2 months ago | 0
Unless you're playing air sim. Then some content creator will take an entire day to make a video about how fundamentals don't matter in a game and how larpers suck, but I'm inclined to agree anyways.
2 months ago | 1
I want to know why chinese mbt don't get it's 6s - 6.3s autoloader and it's TRUE dart
2 months ago | 0
Tankenstein
In life (and in War Thunder, I suppose), there is a massive difference between knowing something, such as a fact, and knowing why something works the way that it does. Once you begin to learn why things work in a specific way, you'll begin to master whatever knowledge or discipline that you're putting your time towards.
2 months ago | [YT] | 495