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#pocket styler
jacob-lovelace · 1 year
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Here's a toast to the one that set the standard for dress up games. Reblog if LN was also your first or if it had an impact on your dressup game obsession
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toxiee · 1 year
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WHO DID THIS?!
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sup3rqu33n · 2 months
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Let’s see how Tiffany blue and chocolate brown do with the gold jacket.
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evilynapple · 2 months
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axi35 · 6 months
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Pocket styler game
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gamingstudio4u1234 · 2 years
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Pocket Styler Apk ( Unlimited Coins and Diamonds
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Pocket Styler is a casual game where you can show off your taste for fashion by dressing up each of the girls in each level. But don't leave it all open to improvisation, since you'll have to take into account the various events your clients plan on attending in order to find the perfect look.
In Pocket Styler, there are tons of clothing items available from the very beginning, as well as others you can to unlock. So spend your budget wisely in order to find the best outfit for each influencer.
Gameplay in Pocket Styler is really simple, making this game a breeze to play. Simply look at the girl's style on the left side of the interface while creating her new custom look on the right. All the clothing items and accessories are organized into different sections, too, so you can find them more easily.
Pocket Styler is a fun game that measures your ability to create killer outfits and score high with the judges. Dress these girls according to the events they plan on attending and help them outshine everyone else.
Download Pocket Styler Apk
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gamexplode-gxp · 2 years
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Pocket Styler
Do you like stylish clothing and usually get fascinated by trendy accessories or stunning hair combinations and beautiful makeup? Do you dream of becoming a trendsetter in the modern world of fashion influencers?  The Pocket Styler app by Nordcurrent brings your dreams into reality with a fashionable treat where you can go for a shopping spree to get the most exquisite clothing that accessories…
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mikexx2 · 8 months
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People You'd Like To Get To Know Better
I was tagged by @lucilla-sims, thanks! :)
Last song: Black Tangled Heart - silverchair
Favorite color: a deep cherry red is my standard answer, but the older I get, the less I can commit to just one colour. And then shades within palettes? Don't even get me started.
Currently watching: Too much to list, quite honestly. None of it particularly current.
Last movie: Past Lives. I enjoyed its gentle grace.
Last reading: Kristy and the Snobs, book #11 from the Babysitter's Club. I've been on a junior fiction kick this year.
Sweet/Spicy/Savory: all - my spice tolerance is really increasing.
Last thing I googled: How to cover up scratches on floorboards.
Current obsession: @moocha-muses Simchelor challenge, biangbiang noodles, Pocket Styler.
Currently working on: nothing sims 2 related. I consider myself semi-retired these days.
Not tagging anyone, go ahead and do it if you want to.
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ringtownrangerlark · 5 months
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[@walkingbugencyclopedia]
Hi there my name is Bugsy we talked Once about Cereal and I’m a Gym Leader in Johto and I’d like to politely disagree with you about the League and Pokeballs.
As you can probably guess from the everything about me I’m an expert in Bug-Types. I’m a specialist in both battling with them and research of them (though not yet qualified for the Professor title, something I want to be in the future). I discovered the move Fury Cutter, which, while not as impressive as a lot of things a lot of other people have done, is pretty rare for someone who was (at the time) 12 years old.
I’ve been involved in my region’s Pokemon League… pretty much since. And I might go so far as to say that these people are the best thing that’s ever happened to me. (Better than most of the people I’d been friends with before that point, at least.) We’re flawed. So’s everything else ever created in the history of everything. Humans aren’t, can’t be, perfect. You and others make some fair points. (Technically the Johtonian Pokemon School is entirely independent of the League and I’d call Unova an exception along with Paldea, but that’s tangential.)
The League aside, Silph and Devon are FAR from the only people making Pokeballs. While the modern mass-produced Pokeball is mostly made by corporations, they’ve been almost an art form for CENTURIES. Not that something being older makes it better by the very principle of it, but people have been hand-making Pokeballs using apricorns and ingenuity long before the styler was a twinkle in its inventor’s eyes. I live a few doors down from a man who’s been making traditional Pokeballs since long before I was even born. The Pokeball, in itself, is not new, not in the same way the styler appears to have been popularized within the lifetime of some still-active Rangers. Also Kalos has its own entirely independent Pokeball factory but that’s a minor factual error on your part at worst.
On a related point, the only Pokeball that can be bought for, quote, “pocket change” without any league badges (which, I may note, are given out at the Gym Leader’s discretion, even disregarding the battle outcome; so that Trainers who are abusive towards Pokemon or similarly not deserving of a Badge don’t get it) are the standard ones (and the Premier Ball, but that’s just standard with a fancy coat of paint). The standard Pokeball is not designed to capture Pokemon efficiently. The other Pokeballs that can be obtained with no League Badges are often a) situational and/or b) sold by private individuals who have the right to refuse to sell their Pokeballs to those that may misuse them.
Claiming that being older makes the Pokeball objectively better would be an appeal to tradition, though, so that’s not really reason enough. What is, in my opinion, reason enough, is the actual value of the more concrete and compact capture that a Pokeball provides. It allows for the entire existence of Pokemon Training as a sport, and the modern idea of living in harmony with Pokemon. Now, while training Pokemon without Pokeballs is possible, it’s a whole lot less practical for everyone involved, up to and including the Pokemon. Pokeballs don’t inherently take away a Pokemon’s free will any more than a styler. After the moment of capture itself, a Pokemon in a Pokeball isn’t “trapped” in any meaningful sense of the word. While it’s registered to you, and many Pokemon often do become more docile (due to the fact that they’re often intelligent enough to know that human means food and safety), others don’t, and those Pokemon are just as aggressive as before they’re caught. The Pokeball, while it can be released and recalled on the command of the Trainer, also allows the Pokemon to do the same things, and while the Trainer can try and counteract those actions, sometimes it’s a losing battle. If that Pokemon doesn’t want to be captured I can assure you that one way or another, it won’t be. (The only exception being the Master Ball but that’s controversial at best and even now only given out to the most trusted of Trainers and authorities.) Pokeballs are also relatively easy to break, which, while it may sound like a negative, is actually a very positive thing all considered. A broken Pokeball deregisters the Pokemon that had been contained within it. This is great because breaking a Pokeball is an easy way to get a Pokemon deregistered if it has been registered to someone that it shouldn’t be. As has been mentioned, Pokeballs are inherently single use, which means that while not all-encompassing, budget is a strong limiting factor.
I’d also like to mention that jamming technology for Pokeballs exists and its lack of widespread use by the authorities is an issue on their part, not on the Pokeballs themselves. Perhaps the adoption of such technology could solve some of the issues you have with Pokeballs in their modern state.
Finally, I’d like to emphasize that no malice is intended in this argument. You, sir, have the correct views on cereal, and that makes you pretty damn cool in my book.
Signed,
Bugsy, Azalea Town Gym Leader
Hello!
I really appreciate this thorough and thoughtful reply. I will be the first to admit that I'm not immune to bias. I come from a region where pokeballs are relatively new and rare, and there is no league, so I have an outsider's perspective on these things, and don't really "get" some aspects of league and trainer culture. I'll try to address your points one by one:
First of all, congratulations! I certainly wasn't doing anything close to that impressive at age 12. And from what I've seen, your bug expertise is top-notch.
I'm really glad the League has been such a positive experience for you. It was never my intention to imply the league itself was evil. I suspect your feelings are similar to mine about the rangers- I started volunteering as a teenager and rangers haven't just been my coworkers, they are family members and good friends. The Union still has it's flaws and inefficiencies, and is far from perfect.
I did not know much about the history of pokeballs! I am also very glad to hear that gym badges are not handed out by battle victory alone. That was a concern for possible abuse. To your point about standard pokeballs not being designed to capture efficiently- I feel like that would just encourage a person to buy and use more pokeballs, rather than addressing the root issues of care, goodness-of-fit, and motivation.
I also feel the need to clarify that I never believed a pokemon caught via ball was trapped, or that registering a pokemon was inherently harmful. And as I have said elsewhere, I am not actually against pokemon capture, training, or battling (or other uses of registered pokemon, such as construction). These practices have existed for centuries and have been often to the betterment of pokemon and humans alike.
I think the primary flaw in my argument was that I focused on pokeballs vs. stylers, when a lot of my concerns boil down really to what I am going to call "trainer culture" for lack of a better word. By this I mean things like:
Trainers not being expected to learn ecology or pokemon biology
Battling being seen as the be-all-end-all of handling situations, even outside of the league and sports battles. For example, the notion that criminal organizations can be managed by vigilantes or citizens fighting with their own pokemon.
Catching a pokemon being seen as synonymous to knowing/learning about/understanding it
Being a battle champion being seen as the peak or 'mastery' of Pokemon
"Gotta catch em all" mentality
Valuing a pokemon's moves and utility in battle as the most important features
Thinking all pokemon must battle, or that evolution (via battle) is necessary for all pokemon
Assuming everyone battles, knows about battling, or follows battling as a sport
Assuming someone who doesn't battle regularly doesn't know about pokemon
I'm not saying all trainers believe these things. But I have encountered these beliefs as basic, unquestioned assumptions in many trainers. And it isn't even typically malicious- just a widespread cultural norm. And you must also remember that I'm coming at this from my position as a ranger. Which means in my day-to-day job I am constantly dealing with things like:
People randomly releasing pokemon they no longer want, often in inappropriate environments or after too much training for wild release (e.g. just dumping an anorith in the ocean).
Mass trafficking of pokemon.
Trainers using wild pokemon as battle practice (rather than gyms or fellow trainers) which can result in widespread damage (e.g. a trainer training their charmander by battling dozens of oddish, who would not normally encounter charmander, and to a degree greater than normal loss through predation. Or someone bringing an elektrike to knock-out multiple magikarp in a region where there are no water electric types, and ocean pokemon are not adapted to that kind of encounter.)
Trainers doing dangerous or disruptive things in the name of catching or battling (e.g. putting honey on trees which fed wild pokemon, in a region without honey trees or wild aipom).
I agree that pokeballs have their benefits for safe capture of pokemon intended to be kept/trained rather than wild. A capture styler is tailored for rangers and wouldn't meet the needs of most others. But I would like more people to recognize
The way modern pokeballs make certains kinds of harm very easy to perpetuate and very hard to stop and
Maybe question a bit more the effects their typical assumptions, behaviors or practices with pokemon, and whether some of these things are actually necessary.
A lot of my job would be much safer and easier if people weren't encouraged to catch and battle as much as possible, while being under-encouraged to actually learn about pokemon and the environment. I hope that has made my position more clear.
With warm regards,
Lark, Ranger (Ringtown, currently Paldea Crater Base)
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poke-entomology · 10 months
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Fourth chapter, looking real bad for our protag
Hundreds of legs sprout from the shadows, a tangleweb of limbs and fangs swarm the ranger while white threads grow at the edges of his vision. Poor Jolteon’s power is running full tilt to keep the webs off of him! A Spinarak is burned till it turns red as a lobster, but even more pour out of the dark and nip, tear, bite, stab- An overwhelming flood of poison and silk threatens to stop all of his moves until he finally stops moving at all!
“No good! We can’t keep up with these numbers! Damn berry salve, next time I’ll shove it up their- Gah!” A Poison Jab strikes him dead on, knocking Alexander prone into the box pile. A crunch is heard below. *sweats* “Sure hope that was just the boxes. Alright, new strategy.”
*glow* A thin band of light circles some of the spiders. The red light in their eyes fades as Alexander draws in the air with his ranger styler. It’s difficult to do while dodging and drawing out Jolteon’s power, the process leaving him exhausted and panting, but the numbers are slowly going down. Soon, only the most powerful of the lot, two huge Ariados, stand in the way.
A pair of webs, thicker than his arm, shoots from the smaller of the two! Jolteon’s Quick Attack prevents Alexander from becoming lunch one last time as the PP for the move runs out. One more Thunderbolt and it’s over! …But where was- *bite*
*cries out in pain* A searing pulse spreads throughout his body, the larger female Ariados snuck around using the webs it’s partner created!
*cough* “Poisoned! Have to-” Alexander reaches for an antidote, just as the pokemon predicted, aiming yet another burst of webbing at the ranger, his hand catching fast inside his pocket and sealing the precious antidote away!
Slowly, it made it’s way closer, inching forward, savoring the taste of fear. It crawled forward ever slowly… and right into the range of Alexander’s capture ring! One loop, two, almost-
“[BA- BWEEP! TARGET ACQUIRED!]” Out of one of the boxes rushed out a pair of box-looking Combee? They smashed into Alexander’s hand, forcing him to drop the ranger tool. Using this confusion, the main body of the Robo Combee, a tool he himself created, rushed in and smashed the thing under it’s metal butt!
“[BA- BWOOP! TASK COMPLETED, USER SKEETER!]” *flies away*
“Damn it!” He had only moments to think before the now freed and enraged Ariados was upon him.
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Why is it so hard to gain gems in every game I play? Be it Hogwarts mystery or pocket styler. Ugh! And yet it’s the gems that will get you more. So annoying!
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achampionswings · 1 year
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@fioreisforlovers
It takes Felix several moments to process the fact that this Tropius is, in fact, talking. To him. He freezes for several moments, staring at her with his typical blank expression- it must look awfully rude. His hand instinctively twitches towards his Capture Styler before he stuffs it into his pocket to avoid making a complete fool of himself.
Eventually, he manages to nod. "Uh- yeah, the last one. Fioreisforlovers, you can just call me Felix. And, uh, this is Warden." He taps the Absol next to him, who seems to be giving Tropius the exact same blank stare that Felix did. "You... you can seriously talk. That's... wow. Uh. Nice to meet you. Wow. Do I just call you... Tropius? Or do you have a name?"
Tropius' wings fluttered, and she let out a happy trill. "Yippee! It's super nice to meet you in person! This is so cool! Nice to meet you and Warden!"
Her wings drooped a bit at the mention of her name. "Tropius is my species name! Mama doesn't like me telling people who aren't family my special name, though."
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lynx-q · 1 year
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"The land of Hyrule is full of creatures known as pokémon. However, I urge you to be wary of these beasts; the Calamity's corruption runs deep, and there are few pokémon left in the wild that will not try to kill you on sight."
over the decades, Calamity Ganon has refined his power to overtake the wills of unsuspecting pokémon, turning them into hyper-aggressive extensions of him own rage. these pokémon are labeled as Malicious, and crave destruction above all else.
while a cure for this condition does exist in the form of stylers, their hard-to-repair mechanisms make stylers a luxury that only a few settlements can afford to keep. this cure, however, does not prevent Ganon from retaking pokémon under the light of the Blood Moon.
on random nights, the sky turns red, ash drifts up off the ground, and the full moon reflects the Calamity's power across the face of Hyrule. any that are pokémon caught out in it's light are helpless against Ganon's thrall, however, if you catch the signs in time, it is possible to prevent your pokémon from becoming Malicious. roofed, enclosed spaces are the best preventative measure one can take, but quick defenses such as a tarp or even a pocket can be just as effective-- just make sure there's not an inch of your pokémon that's sticking out!
it should be noted that the Yiga Clan revel under the conditions the Blood Moon creates, going so far as to outfit their poor pokémon with armor-like control devices that inject Malice directly into the pokémon. this "armor" keeps them compliant, even when they are captured by a styler.
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mirroredranger · 2 years
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What's Valerie's capturing style like? Cautious or reckless? Does she prefer wider loops, or cutting them as small as she can? Does she use Poké Assists often? Does she avoid the (Capture) Styler receiving recoil damage wherever possible, or does she not mind a bit of it?
Valerie's style of capture is wide and cautious. Being the sole ranger on Alola is difficult not only in the duties, but in the risks of if she's out. Getting a new styler isn't a quick thing like in other regions. So wide loops to avoid the disc hitting the Pokemon, taking damage only to the line.
As for pokeassists, Valerie makes great use of them if she can. She even keeps beans in her pocket to reward helper Pokemon (including her own team). Valerie's use of assists have increased after participating in her first contest, as she's developed an interest in how they interact.
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mangora · 2 years
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Fun favorite sheet thing I found online also:
•I also play Sims FreePlay and Pocket Styler a lot which are fun
•My favorite book changes a lot like I also really like the Percy Jackson and Heroes of Olympus series, Romeo and Juliet (yea that’s a play but whatever), The Outsiders, basically anything on a middle or high school reading list I’m a classics enjoyer
•I also really like most sweet things
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hautefinds · 2 months
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Check out this listing I just added to my Poshmark closet: 🆕Madewell Stovepipe Full Length, Size 30.
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