💖 MAKOTO NAEGI AND BYAKUYA TOGAMI FROM DANGANRONPA ARE IN LOVE 💖
💖 requested by @sidetone 💖

seen from United States
seen from Mexico

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Syria
seen from China

seen from Mexico
seen from Japan
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Mexico
seen from United States

seen from Mexico

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
💖 MAKOTO NAEGI AND BYAKUYA TOGAMI FROM DANGANRONPA ARE IN LOVE 💖
💖 requested by @sidetone 💖
🌹 OWO
Send 🌹 for bits of my writing wips
Gordon just gasps out another noise in response, this one closer to a “Whahhuh.” Benrey, in all his infinite wisdom, responds in turn with an exaggerated “Whauhhguguhhhh. Whuhhh.”
just for you. this
sidetone replied to your post “Hey, you still bop to Karkalicious and you fucking know it. Go play...”
love me drowned BANGS
LOVE ME DROWNED DO BE GOING KINDA HARD THO!!!!
for sidetone
🎵 + Melanie king ??? owo
BIRD SONG BY FLORENCE AND THE MACHINE.....
sidetone
We’ve all experienced that person who’s talking on his cell phone in public, in a voice that’s way too loud — on the train, in a restaurant, or walking down the street, screaming into the mobile, oblivious to the effect he’s having on the crowd nearby.
We rarely experience this with a land line phone. That’s because when we talk on a land line phone, “There’s a small percentage of our voice that’s fed back to us. It’s called “sidetone,” according to former Bell Labs scientist Dr. Steve Crandall. About 18 decibels of sound (the loudness of a whisper) comes back to us to give us an indication that our voice is being heard on the other side of the connection. When we have that feedback, we are less apt to make a spectacle of ourselves.
// Source
Image from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection
Forgotten MH Fact #205:
The four numbers that appear near the end of TTA's Sidetone decode to "LIES".