Dmitry Lavrinenko review (soviet, gold order, moscow)

Oh God. That move with her hands… flies really do this…

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By the way this gif was more hard to find than I expected.

I think they tryed to delete it from the internet.

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Another research finished! :slight_smile: It was hard finding any informations about his history…

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There used to be a post with the list of gold order soldiers and their historical names, and feats.
I can’t find it anymore, but your research would fit very well there.

Edit: uh… after researching… It’s your own post :sweat_smile:

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Before i had to find and guess the real names of the soldiers, since most of the older gold orders had slightly different names than their reallife counterparts. But now, somehow, these soldiers got their real name represented ingame (which i am very happy about) and for those new ones, i want to do closer researches since they are more unknown and hard to look up in the internet :slight_smile: i hope the other people are happy about these reviews.

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I for one am happy: I love history. The good, the bad, all of it. It always fascinated me that some men, whatever the faction or ideology they fought for, could perform herculean feats.

I truly hope to have Canadian Leo Major as a gold order soldier one day. They probably will release him as a tier 4 assaulter…

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I completely agree. I am really interested in al kind of ww2 history. I dont care which nation the hero comes from, i am just excited about what a soldier is able to do, when he wants to protect his country and family.

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Or idea.
A lot of people fight for thoughts.

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You should do the Japanese ones next, both of them were Japanese Holdouts, or soldiers that didn’t surrender until after the war was over. Sakae “The Fox” Ōba on Saipan, surrendered three months after the war had ended. Former Major General Umahachi Amō, commander of the 9th Independent Mixed Brigade during the Battle of Saipan. was able to draw out some of the Japanese in hiding by singing the anthem of the Japanese infantry branch. Amō was then able to present documents from the defunct Imperial General Headquarters to Captain Ōba ordering him and his 46 remaining men to surrender themselves to the Americans.

The second, and more well-known holdout, is Hiroo Onoda. He didn’t surrender until 1974, when a Japanese explorer and adventurer sought him out and located him after four days of searching, then later returned with his retired commanding officer to order his surrender. The explorer who found Onoda “wanted to search for ‘Lieutenant Onoda, a panda, and the Abominable Snowman, in that order.’” He quickly found a wild panda and claimed to have spotted a yeti in 1975.

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