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Writer's pictureErminas

Meet the Member Monday - Messius

Welcome to 42nd edition of our blog about DoF members.

We hope that these blogs will entertain you as well as help you in getting to know our members and DoF better.

We asked Messius 15 standard questions from our

Meet the Member blog questionnaire

and then we gave chance to our members to ask 5 specific questions.

 

Hi, my name is Zdeněk but in the world of matrix I am called Messius. I was born in 1998 (the golden era of Czech hockey) in the small town of Šternberk near Olomouc which is the center of North Moravia in the Czech Republic. I currently live and work for a company that manufactures and repairs military vehicles. At the same time I study at the Faculty of Philosophy, majoring in history. In my free time, besides playing games, I also like to read, watch movies, practice historical fencing, visit castles and study Czech medieval history. I hope you enjoy my answers to the questions.


Favorite Quotes/Lines: "Nos firmus ut petra." - Messius Family motto


I have been thinking about different quotes, like from the Husitess leader Žižka: "Don't be afraid of the enemy, don't look at quantity." Or “Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.” by G. Michael Hopf but I wanted something to really own me, so I picked my family motto: Nos firmus ut petra.


Our family motto refers to our surname which is based on the name Peter, which means rock or to be strong like a rock. The motto itself is "We are as strong as a rock."


1. How and why did you join DoF? I know Defenders of Faith from Warband, I used to see them play at various tournaments and I used to meet members on the servers + their website is awesome. I honestly don't know if I've ever played against them but I probably have. However, our fates didn't come together until Bannerlord last year. That's when I finally got a computer that would run Bannerlord, and that's when I started playing multiplayer (I wanted to at least have the Beta badges since I missed Alpha). One night I met Bertha at skirmish who noticed me and texted me in amazement that I was playing Bannerlord. He suggested I join the DoF as they were just looking for new people and I thought why not. I'll certainly never regret it, although playing A division right away was a real bummer :)

2. Favorite moment(s) in DoF? Just to clarify, I don't like "Favorite Thing" questions because I'm the type of person who has a lot of favorite things but not the only one. As far as DoF moments go, I enjoy every minute of playing with this great group of people, including the pre/post game moments with Paul, Ermi, Ganni, Karatak, etc. I like that the group is not just geared towards purely competitive focus but also builds a positive and friendly environment, Including helping players like me who are not so good at the game and are introverts. The best moments for me were the moments in the A division where I could see the differences between myself - players like Tom/Ganni - players from the A division. It helped me set my direction in Bannerlord.

3. Favorite book? I think of books as a form where I can escape from everyday real life and explore different worlds or time periods. So it won't be a surprise if I say that I read a lot of books about Czech history or fantasy.


One of my favourite authors writing about history is Vlastimil Vondruška, a Czech historian and writer. He is probably one of the most popular authors in my country but at the same time other historians don't like him. He writes stories from the point of view of ordinary people who meet real historical figures and fills in the gaps with fiction. I don't see anything wrong with that. He writes really interestingly and manages to capture the lives of ordinary people very well. Unfortunately, you won't find his books in English, I suppose. His Husitská epopej (Hussite epic) series of books is his greatest work.


Ludmila Vaňková is another favourite author who wrote historical novels. Her book Král železný, král zlatý (The Iron King, the Golden King) is the work that got me interested in Czech history as a young child and introduced me to my idol. It is the life story of the Bohemian king Přemysl Otakar II (Ottokar II of Bohemia) Like Vondruška, it's written in a style that makes the readers feel like they're part of the story, relies on historical facts but the rest is fiction.


In the realm of fantasy, I enjoyed reading classics by Tolkien, Lewis, Sapkowski and Rowling.

4. Favorite movies and tv shows? Oh, my God, there are so many movies. I've probably watched The Shawshank Redemption the most, which is also the highest rated film in the Czech Republic. Next, I was most pleasantly surprised by 12 Angry Men. I was worried that I wouldn't enjoy this movie with this theme and it's a pretty old movie. But it's a really great film with a Czech track by Jiří Voskovec. From Czech films I recommend Pelíšky (Cosy Dens), I don't know if you can find it somewhere in English but if they gave it an English title it must be. It's a comedy (with a tragedy at the end) set sometime in the 1960s before the occupation by the Warsaw Pact armies. It captures the typical Czech mood. Every year at Christmas they put this film on TV. And then I could name others, Terminator, Lord of the Rings, Rain Man, Die Hard, Gladiator, Kingdom of Heaven, Braveheart, I could go on forever. The black horse would be A Beautiful Mind, another great film.


The most watched long-running series for me is Stargate because as a kid I always came home from school and sat down in front of the TV where they were showing new episodes. Stargate is a device that transports you to other planets so you probably already know why. Probably everyone should see Band of Brothers because it's incredible how much work they put into this show to make it accurate to reality. I'm not an anime fan in the sense of watching dozens of them but in third grade in elementary school a friend introduced me to the anime Naruto which I loved from the start. There is a lot of life advice and lessons in it. It can be very serious but also very funny. It does have its flaws, especially the ending of Naruto:Shippuunden ends in a way that the author didn't know how to end it anymore but you should definitely give it a try.

Even today I would cry at some of the scenes. Just don't watch it with the English dub, it's terrible.

5. Favorite music? I probably won't surprise you again if I say I listen to all styles. Respectively, I listen to the songs that I like and are across all styles. So I listen to brass bands, medieval music, classical music but also rock, metal, film and game music, in short everything. It depends on my mood and taste but I tend to be a rock/metal listener. One of my favourite bands is Sabaton, a Swedish band whose frontman is half Czech who sing about historical events in the metal genre. I also enjoy Rammstein, their songs and videos are controversial but always highlight some problem in society and their lyrics have a lot of hidden meanings, From the Czech Republic I would recommend Kabát. This is a classic rock band. I also grew up on bands like System of Down or Red Hot Chili Peppers thanks to my brother.

6. Favorite food and drink? Tom will probably kill me for this but one of my favorite foods is pizza Hawai I know, I know, I'm going to hell. Another favourite food is lasagna, I also like fish like salmon or tuna. I won't even despise a good burger. Czech cuisine is very heavy or sweet. As a tourist, you would definitely like to try Svíčková. Czechs make various kinds of sauces and meats. I like a lot of minced meat with tomato sauce and bread dumplings. Sweet foods like buchty, koláče, perníky, bábovky, vdolky etc. I'm sorry but English has no words for it and it would be time consuming to describe it so you have to find it yourself.


I drink mostly water. Someone was probably expecting a beer but don't worry, as a good Czech I drink it also to keep that record After all, Pilsner beer laid the foundation for most beers in the world. What I liked the most and it flowed, it was the Negroni cocktail.

7. Favorite color? This is exactly the question that hurt me as a child. I didn't have a favorite color and people asked me about it so I thought it would be blue because my eyes were blue / green. In fact, I don't have a favorite color but i love bicolors like black / yellow, blue / yellow, red / white. And I probably shouldn't mention that I don't like green ... oh well ... pls Ermi pls ... :)

8. Favorite time of the year? It's going to be a winter because thanks to the genes given to me by a Sweden guy from the Thirty Years' War who enjoyed it with my xxx great-grandmother (no kidding, that's a story in our family about a branch of boys), I got very fair skin and I'm sensitive to Sun and heat. I'm dying at 25 degrees of Celsius. So that's why I like winter and thanks to that I can also do my favorite sport, skiing. On the other hand, I endure the cold so well that I sleep during this period with the window open.

9. Are you sport or esports fan and if so what are your favorite sports and teams?

I watch sports but I'm more of a fan of individualists or national teams. I don't follow any leagues or sports clubs. In FIFA 2005, I cheered for Ajax, I don't know why. I haven't looked at football since we lost to a several weaker teams and we had a gold team (Čech, Rosický, Nedvěd, Poborský, Ujfaluši, Koller, Baroš). I was very pissed then. I support our Czech hockey players the most because we used to be the fourth best in the world. I support every Czech athlete at the Olympics. Our women biathletes are promising now, Adam Ondra is the world number one in mountaineering, we hold world records in javelin throwing for men and women so I'm waiting for some talents, our tennis players are not bad, I was a fan of Aleš Valenta, a ski acrobat, as a kid, Sábliková, speed skater, etc. I have been following the MMA for a long time and I am now waiting for the success of Jiří Procházka. I'm also watching Judo where we have Krpálek.


The only esport I watched closely was Dota 2. I was a fan of the NaVi, the Ukrainian team that won the first The International which is something like a world championship. They almost won two more in a row but they always narrowly lost them in the finals. They won a million dollars then. The last The International had a $ 40 million win prize. Now I almost don't follow it but I support the OG team which is a European team. They won their first "TI" and no one almost believed them (except me and a few others). When they won it was surprising for everyone and then they won the next one. I know that we have now two Czech players in the top division, one of them has won one big tournament a few days ago so it's nice to see the Czechs in esport. When one of the first nations tournaments took place in Hearthstone, the Czechs won it which is probably the biggest success in this.

10. Do you have any pets? Unfortunately not because I live in the flat and I am not the type of person who would force an animal to live indoors without the possibility of running outside. My grandparents always had and still have a dog with whom I always make friends a lot and then he happily welcomes me. I would say that I am probably very close to dogs, one day I would definitely like one.

11. Place you would love to travel to? I probably don't have a specific place I'd like to see. ALL OF THEM !!! Especially medieval castles, fortresses, cities... Ancient places in Greece, Italy, Spain, etc. Modern buildings like skyscrapers don't appeal to me, nor does Asia. Specifically, I would like to visit Neuschwanstein so I would travel mostly the Europe.

12. Most inspiring historical figure? This is definitely Přemysl Otakar II. The Bohemian king living in the 13th century, also called the Iron and Golden King. Iron because his army, especially the czech heavy noble cavalry, was a dreaded opponent and Golden thanks to many discoveries of silver ore in our lands, he became extremely rich. The reason I like him is the fact that he was a kind of European idol of a real knight. He honored and respected all the knightly virtues. And also the fact that he was a second-born son and originally had to retire to a church career. However, the death of his older brother opened the way for him to the throne, and he did it properly. He founded many Czech towns, churches, monasteries or hospitals. He supported the orders caring for the poor and sick and took them under his protection. He created the first "cadastral" lists, reformed the courts and the law, fought corruption of the lower nobility, as one of the few European rulers declared the Jews royal people, it means that the attack on them was like an attack on the king himself. If someone falsely accused a Jew, he himself was punished, etc. He reformed and established mints. He did not force his sister to remarry when she became a widow. He had very good relations with the church. Of course, he gained a lot of territory, diplomatically and by war. Moravia and Bohemia (Czech crown) as well as Austria, Styria, Egerland, Carinthia, Carniola, Pordenone and Aquileia. He also took part in the Crusades to Prussia. Kaliningrad was founded by him. He should also become the Holy Roman emperor because the then the HRE was in a desolate state. But the Electors were so afraid of Otakar that he would control everything so they chose the poor and insignificant Rudolf of Habsburg whom they could control, in which they were mistaken. Rudolf took all of Otakar's lands under imperial law and eventually fought him in the Battle of the Marchfeld. Here Otakar paid for the knightly principles because one part of the enemy attacked him from behind which was very non - knightly at the time, Otakat himself fought until the end and there is full of unknown things as he died. He allegedly did not die but as a prisoner someone had just killed him out of revenge.

His son Wenceslas II. he is also one of the greatest Bohemian kings. He was the king of Poland and Hungary.

13. Favorite games? I choose games in a similar style as books. That's why I don't like FPS games that take place in modern times (except world wars). I like to discover new worlds, such as fantasy or sci-fi but also games that took place in the past. These are mostly RPG games so I'm probably more of an RPG player. So my favorite series are Assassins Creed (to the AC 3), Bioshock, Fallout (not from Bethesda), Metro, Mount and Blade, TES and Witcher series. RYSE: Son of Rome, Mafia (old one), Mafia 2 and games from Telltale. AND KINGDOME COME: DELIVERANCE !!! I'm starting to like platformers and independent games with an original look. If you want to spend a good two euros, buy a Vampire: Survivor. I also played for a long time for example World of Tanks, Heroes and Generals or Star Wars: The Old republic + Dota.

14. Describe your playing style? I'd like to know that too. My personal skill is based on movement so I often change sides of a character's movement, unexpectedly to confuse an opponent and force him to reveal one of the sides. I also play with distance, sometimes I intentionally miss an attack with sufficient but close distance

and force the opponent to attack which I expect and I will use it against him. I don't use kicks much but I try to incorporate them too. I also change styles when I need to be aggressive or pretend to be a worse player. I try to find the opponent's mistakes and use them against him. When it comes to team fighting, I often try to change opponents and hit another enemy in the back, help someone rather than duel. I can be patient and wait for an opponent's mistake. I set up the enemy for our cav, attack at the same time as my teammate but with different side or I just hold the attack until the enemy reveals his side or back. I go to help shooters if they get into the melee and various other individual decisions.

15. What is your main class in Bannerlord? Infantry, that's a short answer, huh? :) I'd say I could play cavalry too but I'm happy with the infantry.

 

And now we will turn to the specific questions our members had for Messius

 

16. Ganni is curious When you started playing M&B what player (or players) was (were) your role model? Thanks for the question, Ganni. I honestly can't tell you when I started playing Mount and Blade. I know I was a little kid and I remember the moment when my older brother was watching videos on Youtube and I was sitting next to him. In the recommended videos, I noticed a picture of two characters and they were wearing some armor, I was fascinated and I told him to click on it. It was probably a trailer for the first Mount and Blade. We were both interested and my brother installed the crack version (sorry TW). I played it for about a year and then Warband came. I bought the boxed version but I was terribly afraid to go play multiplayer because I knew I couldn't fight. I noticed on the internet pages of the Czech clan Moravian Warriors (they were not competitively established but rather played for fun) and I read what is needed to enter. Back then, I found it very difficult and as an introvert it was even worse to meet strangers. So I quit this idea. After a while, I finally decided to enter MP but with the promise that I will not watch the criticism and I will just enjoy it I wanted to play Siege After two days on the Wolfpack_Siege server, I was recruited by a man named JonyD to the second Czech clan, the Bohemian Guard. The procedure suddenly didn't seem difficult to me so I decided to enter. Which was the best choice I've ever made. Because it was an absolutely great group of people who played competitively together, they had fun and everyone loved each other. It's been a beautiful five years. DoF reminds me of that. I started as an archer because it was the only position where there was a shortage of people but it suited me because I didn't know melee very well. I was honestly shitty as the archer. After a year, there was a situation where I had to try a newcomer and he played a balanced duel with me., I got angry and started going to Ludus and practicing blocks with NPCs and fighting players. Then a place for the infantry became available and so I played the infantry. We participated in a lot of tournaments and our clan was basically the Czech NC team, at the end I started playing cav because there was again a shortage of people.. Unfortunately, people then grew old and had other more important interests so BG became inactive. Then I received an invitation from Marek, a former member of Bohemian Guard, to IG so I spent the last years of this clan here, then the NW season came. My role models were a whole bunch of veterans of BG because I was some 13-14 years old at the time and I played with the 20+ and 30+ old guys. Above all, the players JonyD and Thundreon who were considered the best Czech infantry. JonyD even lives 15 kilometers from me but we've never seen each other. : D

17. Erminas's questions: Messius is it true that Prague is an expensive city for tourists? And what place(s) in the Czech Republic would you recommend to first time visitors of your country?

Thanks for the question, Erminas. I want to say up front that I don't live in Prague (were you lurking on my Steam profile? ), so I can't speak for the people here. However, I've been to Prague a few times and know certain things so I'll speak for myself. Prague is definitely more expensive than other cities in the Czech Republic but nothing special. Prague is a really big city and also people make more money here. It's definitely more expensive for a Czech and an "eastern" tourist, but nothing terrible compared to Italy, Germany or France. For a tourist from the "west" it shouldn't be a problem either. But there is one problem. The difference between Prague and center of Prague. Most of the important and interesting places are located in and around the center so there are a lot of tourists here (in fact, most of the tourists visiting the Czech Republic are here). Not many Czechs live in the center, probably only about 10,000. That's why this area is also an area heavily focused on tourists, attractions, traps etc. Best to find the Honest Guide YouTube channel It's Czechs who inform tourists about various scams, attractions, ideas on where to go etc. Lots of restaurants or food stalls in the center have two prices, one for Czechs and the other more expensive for tourists, there are lots of scam money changers and ATMs, which by the way are illegally located in the walls of historical buildings, people who play deaf and dumb and withdraw money, fraudulent monks, taxi drivers who charge you ten times the normal price for a short journey, people offering fake drugs, Balkan people offering fake money, etc. It is important to say that most of these people are not Czech. Frankly, even the tourists themselves are not very considerate. Couples in love put locks on historic railings that are about to fall, touch baroque statues, spray paint on historic buildings, etc. All this is due to too many tourists in one place. As I have written before, most tourists come to visit the Czech Republic but end up only in the center of Prague.


Prague is a truly beautiful city. Prague castles, Charles Bridge, the Old Town Hall with the Astronomical Clock, these are places you should definitely see but they shouldn't be the only places if you are here for more than a day or two. You should also visit other places in the Czech Republic, there are more such beautiful places. I could say Český Krumlov or Karlštejn but they are also crowded with tourists. So I'll invite you somewhere where there aren't so many. I would like to invite you to Olomouc and the historical centre. I live nearby so I can show you around. Olomouc has a beautiful town hall and also a astronomical clock, unfortunately "destroyed" by communist propaganda. There's the Holy Trinity Column or St. Wenceslas Cathedral. From nature, there is definitely the Šumava National Park, Czech Switzerland, Prachov Rocks or Sněžka, the highest mountain of our country. Then there is Holašovice, which is a well-preserved Czech village from the 17th-18th century. Kutná Hora, another medieval town where silver was mined. To Pilsen breweries or to South Moravia for wine (Mikulov). Lednice, Kroměříž or Hluboká castles. Moravian Karst and the cave system. Hranice Abyss, one of the largest abysses in the world, maybe even the largest, they cannot detect it because there are no instruments to verify it. The castles of Perštejn, Bouzov and Bezděz. Or the ruins of Trosky Castle, there are many such places. From one end of the country to the other is only about four hours by car so getting somewhere is not a problem.

18. Gadric is wondering What is Czech Republic's greatest export outside of Kingdom Come: Deliverance? Thank you Gadric, for your question. If this is meant in general. So the Czech Republic is a very industrially oriented country. For Austria-Hungary, we were an assembly plant. And it's no different today. Most of our exports are of machinery, including heavy machinery. So we export mainly cars and car parts. You may know the car brand Tatra or Škoda which, for example, produced tank destroyer Hetzer during the Second World War. Then it's computers or broadcasting equipment. Now I'm going to guess what might be so famous. So Czech Pilsner Urquell or Budweiser. We also have an American equivalent of Coca Cola called Kofola, which is less sweet. You may know Baťa's shoes which was a well-known manufacturer who created a better environment for workers (housing for families, schools, canteens, etc.), introduced the so-called Baťa price (9.99 euros). ETA home appliances. Avast antivirus program. You may have heard of Bohemian glass. PRIM watch. Linet is known in healthcare as a manufacturer of various devices. Jawa motorcycles. Weapons from the Brněnská zbrojovka who bought Colt a few days ago.


The Czechs invented contact lenses, an electric tram, the first car, a propeller, a lightning rod (unpatented), a sugar cube, the word "robot", a semtex explosive, a nylon, the discovery of blood groups or the origin of genetics etc.


If it was meant as another games. So the Czechs created a lot of famous games. From virtual games you definitely know Beat Saber. The Mafia series (I don't count third part) where especially the first original part is considered as the father of Czech games. ARMA series from Bohemian Interactive, Vietcong, Factorio, Euro Truck Simulator 2, Machinarium or Space Engineers.

19. Paul would like to know Have you ever been to the beach? Are you mocking the Czechs for not having access to the sea? Watch out for the Czech marines! Don't worry, I get the joke If there's one thing the Czechs can do, it's make fun of themselves. But you should know one thing. We had access to the sea several times and even owned a piece of the Pacific Ocean. We own two ports in Hamburg and we even had one naval battle which we won thanks to Czechoslovak legionnaires. Battle of Lake Baikal.


And no, I've never been to the beach, and I probably wouldn't have stayed there long to go sightseeing. I'm not the type who can sunbathe on the beach and lie still.

20. Karatak asking: Your top 3 Czech fighters, no matter what martial art (and why of course)?

Thank you Karatak for the question. It probably won't be a surprise if the first person I mention is Jiří Procházka. I've been following his MMA career almost since his first fight and even then you could see he was going to be world class. Some might simply point out that he's only 29 years old and already has 32 fights, 28 wins and 25 KOs. Which are truly amazing numbers, as the first Czech will now be fighting for a world championship belt which in itself is saying something. But what I appreciate most about him is his mental setup. He was a typical troubled kid who only looked for fights at discos and now he is a deep thinker who discusses topics like death, spirit, life etc. I don't know anyone in MMA who has such a well set mind, the guy knows what he wants and how to get it, his will is stronger than his physical capabilities (how he got that KO from Reyes and was back in a second). So yeah. BJP !!!


The next man will be Pavel Bojar. I won't be surprised if no one knows him, even the Czechs themselves don't know him but if you fly to Japan mention the name Takanoyama, they will. He is a Czech sumo wrestler who stood out among sumo wrestlers because he refused to put on the excessive weight required for sumo and only fought with his own weight. Instead, he focused on technique rather than brute strength. He would often catch his opponents off balance and use their weight against them. Which is what I admire most about him. Unfortunately, if his opponent was watching, his weight wasn't enough. However, he definitely deserves to be in the top. I recommend typing his Japanese name into YouTube and watching clips of his fights.


Someone would expect Krpálek there, our judoka who won two golds at the Olympics, two more golds at the World Championships and two bronze + bunch of others from European tournaments etc. But I dare to mention Jan I. from Michalovice. He was a Czech knight who served son of Přemysl Otakar II. so now you know why The reason I mention him is that he was a very successful participant in knight tournaments, winning almost all of them and making our Czech lands famous throughout Europe. The Germans and French remembered him very well at that time because he defeated their best knights. He was a very honest and loyal man who took part in real battles also.


And now two Bonus questions for Messius:


Bonus question by Tom: If you could live in any time of the past, would you go back in time or stay in the present? Whatever the answer, why is that? Thank you Tom :) Interesting question, I certainly have periods I would like to visit, such as the time of Přemysl Otakar II, Karel IV, the Hussite period (mostly the Middle Ages) but I would also like to visit Europe in the time of Ancient Egypt because in northern Germany at Tollense, they uncovered the remains of a great battle where thousands of warriors died which suggests that there must have been some larger civilizations in Europe than just small tribes which is what scientists thought. If I could visit the period but with no chance to return, I wouldn't do it because I probably wouldn't survive in that environment. I wouldn't know the language, I wouldn't know anything about life, how to do what, I wouldn't have modern healthcare, etc. Maybe at the end of my life I would have done it and then declared, I KNEW IT !!!!

Bonus questions by Beeflip: Do you prefer Czechia or Czech Republic? And how many cigarettes do you smoke an hour (if you smoke at all)? Thanks for the question. Oh, my God, this topic. First, it's probably good to say why the Czechs changed / modified the name. The truth is that nobody knows. One beautiful day our politicians said they were going to vote on a new name, they agreed and that was that. Before the vote, none of the citizens knew about it, there were no discussions, no one asked anyone. So I wonder who proposed it and why, what is behind it. The argument was that we are one of the few countries, maybe the only one, that uses the official name but doesn't have a shortened version like everyone else. I don't think I have a problem with the name Czechia itself from a linguistic point of view. The Czechs themselves use the abbreviation "Česko" which can be translated as Czechia. But I have another problem with it. First, the world still remembers us as Czechoslovakia, so for 29 years we have been correcting the world that we are the Czech Republic (and the Slovak Republic) and now we've changed our name again? I wouldn't be surprised if they are confused abroad. Another problem is that they already confused us with Chechnya and we change the name to Czechia which is even more similar? Last problem. The Czech Republic consists of three historical territories. Čechy, Morava and Slezsko. Čechy - the left half of the country was called Bohemia in Latin which is outdated and today we would rather use the word Czechia so what is the difference between Čechy (Czechia) and Česko (Czechia)? The name Czechia seems to me to distance itself from Moravia and Silesia. I am used to using the Czech Republic and I think most Czechs are too. When we talk to foreigners about our country, we use the official name the Czech Republic (like formal) and between ourselves we shorten it to Czechia (informal).


I smoke half a pack in an hour. I'm kidding, I don't smoke. I tried it when I was a kid, probably like every kid but I didn't feel like it was helping. Czechs are pretty heavy smokers but the latest study says the number of smokers in our country is decreasing with each generation so it's on the good way.

 

What an absolute amazing read this blog was, don't You agree?

Thanks for for joining us in the interview Messius :)

Thanks for sharing bit more about yourself and for telling us your "DoF Story".

Hope you stay with us for many years to come!

PS. And with these last few lines being written by me I am proud to say that we have a new record holder! Messius's blog article is the longest we ever had! Grats!

 

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