This is my personal Pokemon collection. (Minus the Mimikyu and Alolan Raichu I just got). I don't have a problem.

seen from Maldives

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Croatia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from India
This is my personal Pokemon collection. (Minus the Mimikyu and Alolan Raichu I just got). I don't have a problem.
Axel's Final Gift: Plushness in a World Without Life
The last polar bear died yesterday. As humanity mourns the extinction of another species in the cascade of collapse, the world turns its gaze to Axel Industries, creators of the Bestower—a device heralded as Earth’s final act of restitution. In a planet choked by its own progress, the Bestower does what humanity could not: it heals. Or so it claims.
The Bestower, a glossy, obelisk-like structure deployed across major climate disaster zones, generates what its creators call "plushness"—a bioengineered ecosystem unlike any life Earth has ever known. Vibrant, spongy surfaces cover the ruined tundras, resembling a living fabric that absorbs carbon and radiates oxygen at a pace that surpasses pre-industrial levels. The plushness, designed to adapt without traditional flora or fauna, is humanity’s last attempt to create life in a world where nature has been all but erased. Yet, critics argue that the Bestower is little more than an elegy for a planet we annihilated, a neon-green Band-Aid over a gaping wound.
Scientists warn that plushness, while effective at stabilizing atmospheric conditions, signals the end of organic biodiversity as it supplants the remnants of Earth's ecosystems. “We’re not saving the planet,” said Dr. Mira Halstead, ecologist and outspoken critic. “We’re memorializing it. Plushness isn’t life—it’s a replacement for everything we’ve lost.” For Axel Industries, however, the Bestower represents a triumph, a defiant act of creation amid ruin. “If Earth can no longer sustain life as we knew it,” said CEO Lars Axel, “then we owe it something better: life as it could be.” Whether this is an act of redemption or hubris remains unclear, but in a world where extinction now defines the era, the Bestower may stand as humanity's final invention—and its ultimate confession.
Six ingredients, one bowl, and with a rich plushness to the crumb I thought was … Six components, one bowl, and with a wealthy plushness to the crumb I believed was heretofore unattainable in any cake, vegan or different. This cake is magic.
We've got Galactic & SuperCute Plushies from Funko!
What are you getting at Capcom? (Also look at my shiny new Recklesss Axe, thanks to @scatha5. She is now my hunting sensei)