Tin foil Taxi syndrome is the phenomenon that any player of the GTA trilogy will have experienced. From GTA III, the start of the trilogy, through Vice City and finally to San Andreas, the cars got gradually tougher, especially in San Andreas, to compensate for the comparative hugeness of the world map you were playing in, so that you could still cover a lot of ground without having to swap cars repeatedly because they kept blowing up.
In short, tin foil Taxi syndrome is the effect of moving from San Andreas to GTA III (which many players will have tried because this is the correct chronological order) and noticing the huge difference in how brittle the cars seem to be in GTA III.
In short, tin foil Taxi syndrome is the effect of moving from San Andreas to GTA III (which many players will have tried because this is the correct chronological order) and noticing the huge difference in how brittle the cars seem to be in GTA III.
by Marky_ November 15, 2006
by your mom April 08, 2004
While your giving anal, she takes a shit and then when you take your dick out you have shit on the top of your dick.
by mbaum727 July 23, 2008
The metal disposal box meant for tampons, maxi pads, sanitary napkins, and feminine hygiene products found in women's bathrooms.
I need to find a Vampire Tea Tin, my flow is extra heavy today.
The Assistant Principal was walking in, so I stashed my weed in the Vampire Tea Tin in the girls room!
The Assistant Principal was walking in, so I stashed my weed in the Vampire Tea Tin in the girls room!
by Stoutwalker November 09, 2012
Someone who farts during church, thinks its funny, then gets beat up by the pastor after the service.
by Seanathon69 September 26, 2010
by Wawa Walton March 05, 2008
"Tin chuẩn chưa anh" (in English: "Is the news correct?") is a phrase popularized by Vietnamese football commentator/journalist Anh Ngọc, who often publishes unverified and sometimes made-up news revolving football transfers.
It is frequently used to question the accuracy of news, with a degree of satire involved.
It is frequently used to question the accuracy of news, with a degree of satire involved.
by Gerald725DoubleBarrel June 02, 2022