Cuno and Cunoesse are walking talking proof that spanking is wrong and you should never hit your kids. Or give them amphetamines
seen from China

seen from Japan

seen from Finland
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Spain
seen from China
seen from Yemen
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia
Cuno and Cunoesse are walking talking proof that spanking is wrong and you should never hit your kids. Or give them amphetamines
Please scream about Wyatt pleasee
This boy has so much on his shoulders. How is he still able to act happy and optimistic, despite all of the shit around him and everything that happened to him?Or, more importantly: how much of it is a facade?We get one look at a broken down Wyatt but it’s enough. He feels guilty about Prendergast’s disappearance. Probably feels slightly responsible for Blondie’s death. Is haunted by his naive mistakes during the final assault. Probably thinks he’s part of the reason they failed. Wishes he died instead of Fergus. All of this remains in his mind constantly. And with his mantra of “what would Captain Blazkowicz do”, I reckon it’s safe to assume he’s thinks he’s failed Blazko. He looks up to that man with the utmost respect and sees him as a father-figure and role model, able to do everything right and protect them all. Wyatt struggled to keep together a small resistance and eventually got caught. After so many mistakes, he sees himself as not much more than a failure. Those 14 years after the war were spent asking himself “why me?”.And yet he persevered. For hope. For the people. For the cause. He put aside his own problems and pushed on, continuing to do the right thing, because it’s what Captain Blazkowicz would do.