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Natsuki is a character in the video game series Doki Doki Literature Club!. She is one of four girls in the titular literature club, alongside Sayori , Yuri , and Monika . She is a tsundere given a backstory of domestic abuse by her fictional father, with her traits ultimately becoming more pronounced due to Monika's intervention in the game's ...
Doki Doki Literature Club! (sometimes abbreviated as DDLC) is a 2017 visual novel video game developed by Team Salvato for personal computers.The story follows a student who reluctantly joins his high school's literature club at the insistence of his friend Sayori, and is given the option to romantically pursue her, Yuri, or Natsuki.
Sayori is one of the four non-playable characters in Doki Doki Literature Club!, alongside Yuri, Natsuki, and Monika, all of whom belong to the literature club.She is the best friend of the protagonist, and convinces him to join the club.
South Carolina executed Marion Bowman Jr. by lethal injection on Friday in the first execution in the United States this year.. Bowman, who was pronounced dead at 6:27 p.m., was on Death Row for ...
Winnie Harlow is getting ready to strut down the aisle!. The model, 30, got engaged to NBA star Kyle Kuzma, a small forward on the Washington Bucks, on Feb. 13.. The couple announced the happy ...
Yuri was created for Doki Doki Literature Club! by Dan Salvato.She is a shy girl, and someone who is romantically interested in the game's player character. As the game progresses, signs of mental illness become more evident, including her obsession with the player character, exhibiting self-harm tendencies and concealing her cutting with long sleeves.
Nearby, outside a hut, neighbors sit and listen — men on one side, women on the other — as an elder with a white beard and turban recites poetry about brotherhood and the folly of greed. Donkeys bray. Women cook flatbread over open fires.
The phrase was popularized after Life magazine published the painting Marines Call It That 2,000 Yard Stare by World War II artist and correspondent Tom Lea, [4] although the painting was not referred to with that title in the 1945 magazine article.