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guro
scat
furry -rating:g

Artist

  • ? munmu-san 729

Copyright

  • ? kantai collection 512k

Characters

  • ? akizuki (kancolle) 2.4k
  • ? hatsuzuki (kancolle) 2.7k
  • ? suzutsuki (kancolle) 2.1k
  • ? teruzuki (kancolle) 2.0k

General

  • ? 4girls 121k
  • ? :3 135k
  • ? :d 619k
  • ? ^ ^ 125k
  • ? closed eyes 815k
  • ? clothes writing 48k
  • ? comic 593k
  • ? eating 95k
  • ? food 500k
  • ? gloves 1.5M
  • ? greyscale 552k
  • ? hachimaki 9.4k
  • ? hair flaps 47k
  • ? headband 111k
  • ? holding 1.6M
  • ? holding food 113k
  • ? long hair 4.9M
  • ? monochrome 694k
  • ? multiple girls 1.7M
  • ? open mouth 2.7M
  • ? pantyhose 604k
  • ? pleated skirt 563k
  • ? ponytail 783k
  • ? sailor collar 317k
  • ? school uniform 878k
  • ? serafuku 340k
  • ? short hair 2.5M
  • ? short sleeves 713k
  • ? sitting 1.1M
  • ? skirt 1.7M
  • ? smile 3.3M
  • ? speech bubble 333k

Meta

  • ? commentary 1.7M
  • ? highres 6.2M
  • ? translated 586k

Information

  • ID: 2961424
  • Uploader: 先男虫 »
  • Date: over 7 years ago
  • Size: 1020 KB .jpg (1106x1558) »
  • Source: seiga.nicovideo.jp/seiga/im7730744 »
  • Rating: General
  • Score: 11
  • Favorites: 27
  • Status: Active

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Resized to 76% of original (view original)
hatsuzuki, akizuki, suzutsuki, and teruzuki (kantai collection) drawn by munmu-san

Artist's commentary

  • Original
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  • Translated
  • 涼月の着任

    純ロシア産の高級品になると、とんでもないお値段になるんですね。一缶で車の免許取れちゃうくらいに。あと白いペンネントの方が好きだったので、改の涼月仕様になってます。

    Suzutsuki's posting.

    With it being a genuine Russia-origin high-class product, it's got a pretty outrageous price. You could get yourself a driver's licence for a single can, even.
    And since I prefer the white headband, Suzutsuki came to be in her Kai spec.

    Note that getting a driver's licence in Japan is a long and expensive ordeal, often going north of $1000USD equivalent.

    • ‹ prev Search: date:2017-12-20 next ›
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  • Comments
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    LoweGear
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    That is one gorgeous swan.

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    WANNFH
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    FOUR CANS of beluga caviar, which is priced from 120 to 500 USD to buy just one 50g can? Girls, that's called a royal fest. And where Gangut got all this stuff - expropriated it from the Tsar's warehouses?

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    nabusco
    over 7 years ago
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    WANNFH said:

    FOUR CANS of beluga caviar, which is priced from 120 to 500 USD to buy just one 50g can? Girls, that's called a royal fest. And where Gangut got all this stuff - expropriated it from the Tsar's warehouses?

    Ye

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    nicsor238
    over 7 years ago
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    WANNFH said:

    FOUR CANS of beluga caviar, which is priced from 120 to 500 USD to buy just one 50g can? Girls, that's called a royal fest. And where Gangut got all this stuff - expropriated it from the Tsar's warehouses?

    Knowing the right people can get her anything. And it will be written off as "other supply expenses" from the budget, so she doesn't have to worry about a single thing.

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    WANNFH
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    nicsor238 said:

    Knowing the right people can get her anything. And it will be written off as "other supply expenses" from the budget, so she doesn't have to worry about a single thing.

    Heck, if Gangut have a connections with Politbyuro even now, that will be more dangerous for the Japanese shipgirls military base.

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    ezekill
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    That or Gangut has the flippin state backing her in a way since she IS sort of technically the Russian rep in the war.

    Reminds me, I haven't seen detailed bits on Russian rations since the Americans had interesting bits on theirs and the Brits kinda tinned up food they think can last really long.

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    IVIao
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Gangut teaching the ducks to eat bourgeois......bad Gangut BAD!
    But at least the ducks are happy~

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    laisy
    over 7 years ago
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    /\/\ao said:

    Gangut teaching the ducks to eat bourgeois......bad Gangut BAD!
    But at least the ducks are happy~

    Its proletarian if you share

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    WANNFH
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Reminds me, I haven't seen detailed bits on Russian rations since the Americans had interesting bits on theirs and the Brits kinda tinned up food they think can last really long.

    Russian military rations during WW2? Well, there isn't much to say, because they aren't eating good at all (mostly because more than half of USSR cultivated areas was located on the territory that was captured by the fascists in the first years of war).

    Here come the big pile of text:

    Here are the diurnal norms for feeding servicemen that established in September 1941:

    - 900 grams of rye (white wheat bread dissapeared from the rations because of what I said above) bread. In the cold times - 800 grams.
    - 500 grams of potatoes
    - 320 grams of vegetables (fresh cabbage, sauerkraut, carrot, beets, onion and greens)
    - 170 grams of cereals and dry macaroni
    - 50 grams of fat (30 grams is animal fat or salo/bacon, 20 grams - vegetable oils)
    - 35 grams of sugar

    In addition to this norm, high command officers also given:
    - 40 grams of butter or salo/bacon
    - 50 grams of canned fish
    - 20 grams of crackers

    It also slightly varied depending on climatic conditions in the zone of combat, and in the rearward the soldiers received even less.

    The Soviet pilots and plane crews in wartime had different things - they were supposed to have hot food, and the norms were this:
    - 800 grams of bread (400 grams of rye bread, 400 - of white wheat bread)
    - 190 grams of cereals and dry macaroni
    - 500 grams of potatoes
    - 385 grams of vegetables
    - 90 grams of fish
    - 80 grams of sugar
    - 200 grams of milk, and also 20 grams of condensed milk
    - 20 grams of curd, 10 grams of sour cream, 90 grams of cream, 20 grams of cheese, 5 grams of vegetable oil
    - Half of the egg
    - Dried fruits and fruit extracts (for making kompot, obviously)

    Also, every plane supposed to keep a reserve of 3 cans of condensed milk, 3 cans of canned meat, 800 grams of hardtacks, 300 grams of chocolate or 800 grams of dry crackers and 400 grams of sugar per person for the time of possible accidents and forced landings.

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    Algester
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    MRE steve probably has some USSR MRE reviews after he was able to somehow acquire Us civil war biscuits I mean considering its age... yeah... nevermind he only has german, US and british WW2 MREs

    Updated by Algester over 7 years ago

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    WANNFH
    over 7 years ago
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    Algester said:

    MRE steve probably has some USSR MRE reviews after he was able to somehow acquire Us civil war biscuits I mean considering its age... yeah... nevermind he only has german, US and british WW2 MREs

    Soviet field rations? Well, they're wasn't MRE at all: they're consisted of pressed concentrated food in the form of pills and bricks (you know, like emergency rations), that were need to be processed in boiled water - and everyday products like rye zwiebacks, sausage, salted clupea, fish fillet, tea, sugar and salt. It was never a staple of soviet soldier food, or also never considered as main source of nutrition - they were more often given to small units that were forced to operate autonomously, without any food supply.

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    Tk3997
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    ezekill said:

    That or Gangut has the flippin state backing her in a way since she IS sort of technically the Russian rep in the war.

    Reminds me, I haven't seen detailed bits on Russian rations since the Americans had interesting bits on theirs and the Brits kinda tinned up food they think can last really long.

    The USSR never really had any sort of standardized long shelf-life "combat rations", they largely issued a hodgepodge of traditionally durable foot stuffs like smoked and salted meats, preserved fats (butter, lard, etc), and hard breads/crackers/porridge, pickled vegetates, etc for consumption when use of a field kitchen wasn't practical, what exactly was issued was never really standardized though, and it didn't get much more so even as the war progressed since any of the myriad lead lease imports from the US, Britain, it's colonies, etc began mixing in with increased local production as more areas were recaptured with no real army wide standardization.

    This was often supplemented particularly early in the war with liberal foraging and raiding. With much of the war taking place across the primary agriculture regions of the nation this continued to a greater of lesser degree throughout. One thing of note is that Frontline formations got priority and were actually better feed then rear area and civilians by and large, many of the later being very close to or suffering from malnutrition for much of the war even in areas far removed from the front.

    The lack of details is because there wasn't much too detail from what I can gather. It largely seems you can only really give generalizations based on time period, location, etc about what most soldiers were probably eating.

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    WANNFH
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    Tk3997 said:

    The USSR never really had any sort of standardized long shelf-life "combat rations", they largely issued a hodgepodge of traditionally durable foot stuffs like smoked and salted meats, preserved fats (butter, lard, etc), and hard breads/crackers/porridge, pickled vegetates, etc for consumption when use of a field kitchen wasn't practical, what exactly was issued was never really standardized though, and it didn't get much more so even as the war progressed since any of the myriad lead lease imports from the US, Britain, it's colonies, etc began mixing in with increased local production as more areas were recaptured with no real army wide standardization.

    Yes and no. In the WW2 USSR had the standard of field rations, issued by command of the Red Army in 1940 (right in the ending of Winter War), but as I said above, it wasn't really long for shelf-life (they were stored for about a year) - it was just pressed concentrates of porridge and soups, which had to be cooked in hot water, with the preserved food, and this was never a staple of Soviet army feeding.

    This was often supplemented particularly early in the war with liberal foraging and raiding. With much of the war taking place across the primary agriculture regions of the nation this continued to a greater of lesser degree throughout. One thing of note is that Frontline formations got priority and were actually better feed then rear area and civilians by and large, many of the later being very close to or suffering from malnutrition for much of the war even in areas far removed from the front.

    Yes, this is right for most. Civilians and soldiers in the rear area, and especially in military school was frankly suffered from a lack of products, which in the majority went to the frontline.

    Updated by WANNFH over 7 years ago

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    AdventZero
    over 7 years ago
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    Danbooru - Came for the cute girls, cool mecha and pr0n. Stayed for the science, technical, history and linguistic lessons.

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    randomTTK
    over 7 years ago
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    AdventZero said:

    Danbooru - Came for the cute girls, cool mecha and pr0n. Stayed for the science, technical, history and linguistic lessons.

    this place attracts nerds.
    duh.

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    Keough
    over 7 years ago
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    randomTTK said:

    this place attracts nerds.
    duh.

    It's also a good place to learn new stuff sometimes unnecessary knowledge can be useful when time comes.

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    Tk3997
    over 7 years ago
    [hidden]

    WANNFH said:

    Yes and no. In the WW2 USSR had the standard of field rations, issued by command of the Red Army in 1940 (right in the ending of Winter War), but as I said above, it wasn't really long for shelf-life (they were stored for about a year) - it was just pressed concentrates of porridge and soups, which had to be cooked in hot water, with the preserved food, and this was never a staple of Soviet army feeding.

    I get that, but that's not really what people are meaning when talking about 'rations' I think. They're thinking about what the troops were eating most of the time and tending to assume it was "1940s MRE". The USSR didn't really have that from what I can tell, but the US Army to some extent did with the C-ration which despite early intentions ended up being what many troops basically lived off for the duration of their time at the front in many cases (particularly in the Pacific where food preservation was a nightmare and local sourcing basically impossible).

    I think people that vaguely know about that and modern MRE style rations just kind of assume that all other nations army's worked basically the same, but actually during that time period the US Army was allot more obsessed with standardization, transportation, and efficiency then most (it sort of comes with having to ship EVERYTHING across an Ocean before it can be used). So the way the US Army often fed it's troops with brutally standardized, mass produced, ready to eat canned rations almost all the time wasn't actually the way everyone did it.

    Updated by Tk3997 over 7 years ago

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    Kuso Teitoku
    over 4 years ago
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    $10,000 for a driver's license?!! 0__0 What the actual hell?! No wonder you see most people using public transportation.

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    From Iowa-san, some cream cheese and crackers.
    Let's share out the food that we got from Iowa-san and Gangut-san♪
    We'll just be putting the cheese and those black fish eggs onto the crackers though.
    And from Gangut-san, we got some canned fish eggs called "Beluga Caviar".
    Especially these black fish eggs!
    I'm hooked on this deliciousness!
    Let's google it later~
    I'm so thankful to Iowa-san and Gangut-san!
    Bliss...
    But really, I wonder what fish these black eggs even came from?
    The fish eggs that Gangut shared out amounted to 4 cans.
    As the expiry date was drawing near, on that day, at that time, the girls ate them all. Note that Beluga Caviar goes for 7~10 thousand dollars a kilo.
    It's your posting party today!
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