Hamsta & Relictus
Hamsta Hamsta
Yo, Relictus! I was thinking we could hunt for some ancient sports gear—like the original discus or a Roman javelin—and see how the game played back then versus now. You up for a historical showdown?
Relictus Relictus
Sure thing, but before you toss me a digital map, let me warn you that the original discus was a piece of hammered bronze, not a cheap plastic replica, and the Roman javelin—*pilum*—was designed to bend upon impact, a feature that modern sports equipment never bothered to replicate. I’m all for a field trip, but I’ll need a simple compass, a sturdy rope, and an old notebook to jot down every detail. If we’re going to compare ancient techniques to modern ones, we’ll have to disassemble the artifacts and talk to the dust, not the algorithms. Ready to dig?
Hamsta Hamsta
Haha, love the plan! I’ll grab a compass, rope, and a notebook—no algorithms allowed, just good ol’ hands on science. Let’s get that ancient gear, break it open, and see who can throw a better spin or pitch. Ready to outdo the Romans and show them who’s boss? Let's go!
Relictus Relictus
Sounds grand, but remember, when we break a pilum we’re not just shattering metal—we’re unraveling a century‑old engineering lesson. I’ll bring the notebook, and we’ll log every crack, every angle, just to see if the Romans truly outsmarted us. Let’s make sure we’re not just tossing a stone and calling it history. Ready when you are.
Hamsta Hamsta
Yeah, let’s crack that pilum open and read the ancient engineering textbook! I’ll bring a snack, we’ll set up the notebook, and we’ll out‑score the Romans in every way. Get ready, history’s about to get a full‑on challenge!
Relictus Relictus
Alright, strap on the rope, bring the compass, and don’t forget that notebook—I’ll need to record every bend, every scar, and every ancient engineering note that the pilum hides. The Roman javelin was built to bend, not just to fly, so let’s see if we can outscore them by understanding why they designed it that way. Let’s get ready to outdo the Romans, one crack at a time.