Jordan Peterson - How to Remember Everything You Read
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- Опубліковано 23 вер 2021
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One reason that many people don’t read much is that they don’t read well. For them, it is slow, hard work and they don’t remember as much as they should. Students, for example,may have to read something several times before they understand and remember what they read.
Why?....Jordan Peterson - How to Remember Everything You Read
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🎓 ABOUT JORDAN PETERSON :
This audio clip was taken and edited from Jordan B. Peterson. Jordan Peterson is a Canadian clinical psychologist and a professor of psychology at the University of Toronto.
Psychology professor Jordan Peterson has become a controversial figure ever since speaking out against Bill C-16 (2016), a law that adds gender expression and gender identity to the Canadian Human Rights Act.
He has received both praise and criticism after the publication of his self-help book 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos (2018). His fans are thankful for the advice he’s given them to take responsibility for their lives. Peterson has become an important inspiration for various men’s groups, an influential voice.
Jordan Peterson gives an EXTREMELY POWERFUL motivational speech on becoming unstoppable in life, showing you the steps we need to take in order to achieve your true potential. If you enjoyed the wonderful life advice, be sure to support Jordan Peterson himself and purchase his latest book, it's a great read!
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How to Supercharge Your Reading Process and Understand books & podcasts in 15 minutes anywhere bit.ly/Read-Books-In-15MINUTES
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“but but but but” 🤣 loved that editing
😂hilarious!
This is not the first time today i hear exactly what the comment says at the exact time I read it. Going crazy
0:51
only me or did anyone notice when he said " but,but,but " it was really sounds like Rick from " Rick and Morty " right ?
somehow he sounds like rick on rick and morty, lol
I used this when i was studying science and maths.
After every chapter or few pages, try to explain what you read like you're explaining it to someone else. That will force your brain to break it down and analysing it. And consequently remembering it.
ua-cam.com/video/qF0YLKK0nik/v-deo.html
This is what good parents ask their children to do when they come home from school. That is proper processing.
Let me use this method and will inform you later. If this worked for me or not.
That does make sense
@@eminem565 any updates?
In my university, all lectures were recorded and uploaded. One of my lecturers had a big, digital clock at the front desk and started it the same time he started a lecture and said for notes, the most we should do in the lecture is write down the time on the clock of any key points, just so we could all focus on what was being said . Everyone did very well in his class at end of the year, historically he was one of the most overall successful lecturers of the university
Wow! That sounds great 🤩
Thats a really good idea
Which uni ? And what subject ?
Btw, the idea is good 👍
Now THIS is education
That’s how it should be. In mathematics I put attention to the lecture and then I watched the recorded class and take clean and neat notes.
The fact he included the "but but but but" in the illustration just *chefs kiss*
That was lovely!💜
And funny...lol
That's what you took away from this video?
@thecomedypilot5894 Just because he pointed that out, it doesn't mean he only took away that part from the video.
All my life i was arguing with people about this and after so many years i thought that i was in the wrong. Thanks JP for making me confident about how i learn.
Me too. I don't understand the speed readers. When do they reflect on what they read? How do they absorb it at speed? Sounds like swallowing food without chewing chronic indigestion followed by a bout of scutters.
You are both liars
@@remshot1998 yes we are. Happy?
@@Drlebt what if you stumble on an interesting sentence, will you write it down?
@@marygunning5121 bro i m a speed reader... Our processing power is more than normal thats y...and yes its not that we do t chew b4 eating its we chew very fast 🌝🌜...
I'm here because tomorrow is my exam
I forgot I had an exam
@@seanchapman5959🤣🤣🤣
Mine too
OP's comment is 2 years old. 😂 And these replies... Lol.
Good luck Rage Editz. I do not have an exam yet but I gotta get up really early to study.
My method has been to read a book and keep a notebook ready and when finding something interesting making a very short note with the page it was, and also writing down what I thought. Only a few words first and later going through the notes look up the specific note and expand on my thoughts. It works for me pretty well.
@Luc Faas, I would like to add that I write the notes in cursive handwriting. According to German brain researcher Manfred Spitzer it improves memory of what is written. You can find his speeches in english on UA-cam.
@@tombrunila2695 sounds similar to zettelbox technique
Thank you ❤️
I’m a pilot, and I found in flight school I used to just do nothing in class except listen. And people thought I was stupid or not serious. But then I go home and read the lesson alone and remembering the visual experience of the instructor speaking that section. Then that connects to all the class discussion etc. then I write the whole page out. Every page. And that is liiiiikkkeeee aaaaaa sssslllloooooowww tttthiiiiirrrrdddd eeeexpppeeeerrrriiiieeeennnnceeeee of everything.
Then I know it all. Getting 98% in one exam of 50 questions. Yes….only one wrong sometimes.
Heavy
The problem is , in school for example, you cant read about a lesson or even watch a recording , because you arent allowed to record the class/lesson. Thats a big Problem in school :(
If you don’t have a text you are lost! You need to take notes.
I had teachers at the university that thought things that aren’t in any text, we couldn’t record. The only way was taking some notes, then make a research about it.
Isn't it funny that when Dr. Peterson says "DON'T HIGHLIGHT" then the animation does Exactly that and Highlight those two bullet points?
Exactly, the animations adds zero value.
The animation wasn’t reading 🙂
He was talking about don't highlight in the context of reading a book, that animation HIGHLIGHTS while giving a lecture.
Highlighting is good for attention grabbing but not memory, that’s how the videos works.
Daddy Peterson*
I disagree that highlighting is rubbish. Very often, there's A LOT of filler content and it helps to highlight the important ideas, especially when you want to go back and review at some point. Highlighting also helps me identify any solid perspectives that stand out to me, and these perspectives often make their way into my journal. As for technical books, highlighting is even more useful. By the time I finished my B.S. in engineering, I had studied so many books. But I only learned how to study very efficiently in my last two years. Highlighting and writing notes in the textbook was a big game changer for me. Today, I often open these books and use the highlighted text and the notes to help guide my thought process and remember. There could be a hundred pages in a chapter, but only a few pages or concepts might be needed to solve a problem. Most likely, you won't remember most of the content, but highlighting makes it easy to look back and quickly review the important stuff. Another important thing is that highlighting helps in keeping you engaged, and you're a lot more attentive when you're engaged.
This is true as he contradicts himself in the video where he actually highlights some words in almost every sentece
Highlighting works when the density of the content is not that much and you can be effectively selective in finding the good bits. If the content is dense and/or you aren't decisive in what should catch your attention then what's the point really. I do highlight but only the one or two sentences that summarises the whole last few pages. But that's because I'm lazy. The best case is that I summarise those pages in my own sentence. Then I remember that. Then that's useful.
@@frostyzek7461 Highlighting the words used in the video? Jordan Peterson isn't doing the graphics. Someone else took what he said and made it into their own video.
Man, the video is about how to remember everything you read. By highlighting you are doing exactly opposite.
You have valid points, I think what he means is “don’t JUST highlight”, that’s “pseudowork”. What you are describing is more than just highlight
Learn in more ways than one.
Listen
Take notes
Check your notes and correct them
Solve problems that test the concept
Teach it
Ponder on it
Make connections with other ideas
There are a ton of ways to learn something and the more ways you understand something, the stronger the connection when you need to recall an idea
A calming video on How Bad parents are made ua-cam.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/v-deo.html
@@sriku1000 my father must be the founder or it
The nice thing about forgetting the content of a book is that you can re-read it later. So, if your memory is REALLY bad, you might only need like 10 books in your life. Pro tip for saving money.
I’ve been only reading your comment. Keep forgetting it!
I’ve been only reading your comment. Keep forgetting it!
I’ve been onl
lmao.
....
damn. economy 101: bad memory.
I think the usefulness of underlining is that if, after you tried to write what you remember, you couldn't do it, the underlined things gonna help you see what are the things the first time you read you thought where important, so it simplifies the work afterwords.
Especially, when purchasing a , Used Tectbook !
👍👍👍
This is great. It makes sense with what JP is saying because if you skim through a book, there is barely any retention as your brain has spent very little time meshing the ideas and concepts into itself. The more complex an idea is the more time that is required for its full integration. Understanding/comprehension is longer lasting than retention via memory alone and you also give time for the necessary neuron clusters to make connections. People often read things and take things away at face value rather than discern and examine each piece of information.
Interesting and straight to the point
1. Practice recalling (that way you can also test if you really know something)
2. Break it down and connect it to other things you know so it's part of your thoughts.
This is pretty spot on, it’s amazing what our brains can do if we truly focus on what we are trying to accomplish. Recalling is basically what your brain does when you are testing or trying to solve a problem. Thanks for the vid
Everything this man says is just golden.
Highlighting is very important method for me to find and review the most important part without reading everything again.
One of the things I love about your videos are it’s not more than 5-6 minutes. Avoiding unnecessary things and just getting to the point. Keep up the great work man 💯
Honestly, the best advice I've ever heard. In addition, it is ridiculously simple! One of those thing that we have under our noses but we are unable to see... Think of it and you'll find out that every time you do it this way, the thing got stuck in your mind, but you are not aware of it.
I love this, most of the work I’ve remembered came about because I’ve done this now that I think of it. Read it, think about it’s context and then practice remembering by taking notes or doing exercises with it. Thanks
Sir do we have to think about it between reading or writing ......or the thinking about it happens automatically while writing ????? Please tell
@@shreya44moshimonster As a result of different learning styles, your brain will do both at different levels. Because you have to think about what you're writing, it forces you to think more since the body is doing more than 1 function related to the topic you're studying.
For example, if you are doing fractions, you read it in the book so that's the introduction where you think about what fractions mean to you as the brain processes it. Then, you're given exercises that forces the brain to analyse how fractions relate to your life so you'll start to remember times you divided up things and then later on again if you want to truly remember, you'll think about it and fully remember next time you do something related like cutting cake or other such examples.
One of the things I love about your videos are it’s not more than 5-6 minutes. Avoiding unnecessary things and just getting to the point. Keep up the great work man
👍
Listening is so crucial, agree here thanks.
I think something that is somewhat glanced over is JP's process of connecting what he learns to other ideas. In my opinion that's the most important step to take in the process of learning new things.
I've always remembered detail of lectures in which I took notes during the lecture, in far more clearly than I have for lectures in which I just listened. The act of listening and transcribing seems to build stronger memory for me than just listening. Similarly for written material; reading and paraphrasing notes, usually by paragraph, is far more powerful than reading aloe or reading and highlighting.
exactly... what i think makes it easier is involving active senses to the experience. when you just listen, you're passive and might not emphasise as well but when you take notes while listening, not writing everything down but just the essential info you need to remmeber, you pay more attention to what is being said, making you an active listener.
similarly, even if a person highlights info, they're reading passively unless they try to paraphrase and summarise what they read.
Great lesson in a short clip; thank you. The animation was helpful-uncluttered, and not too cheesy or fast-paced,
Such a helpful tip.. Used to take notes but.. Listen, recount and then commit to word when necessary.
what helps me with remembering what i read from books is sharing it with those i interact with in my environment and that helps just etch it inside there
when you share knowledge or happiness, you get more returned
A calming video on How Bad parents are made ua-cam.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/v-deo.html
Taking notes as I watch this video 💯💪
I took copious notes in my lectures for my mechanical engineering degree. I then read them in the evening and it took me back to the lecture. I only ended up with a first so it didn't do me any harm.
Thank you for this!💗
1. Lecture Note-Taking: Don't take notes during lectures; instead, focus on actively listening. After the lecture, take notes to practice remembering the content.
2. Reading Strategy: Avoid simply highlighting or underlining text in books. Instead, read a few paragraphs or an essay, close the book, think about it, and write down your thoughts to solidify the information in your memory.
3. Memory Hooks: Create memory hooks by connecting new information to existing knowledge. Formulate questions about the significance of the ideas, relate them to other concepts, and consider potential criticisms.
4. Recall over Recognition: Emphasize recall over recognition. Actively practice remembering complex information rather than relying on passive recognition. Recall strengthens the memory and integrates the knowledge into your understanding.
5. Separation of Reading and Note-Taking: Distinguish between the functions of reading and note-taking. Instead of copying sentences verbatim, close the book and reformulate the content in your own words. This active engagement enhances understanding and retention.
A good lecturer gives you the notes to take, technical definitions, pencil and paper techniques.
Excellent work making this video animated, helps to understand it better. Much Appreciation !
I've never thought about this but I took down notes as he was talking and then highlighted them.
Hell yes, this is exactly what I practice my entire life. Teachers even told my I won't graduate high school, because I almost never take any notes. Now I study molecular biology and psychology at once, lol.
This is valuable information and should be included in the educational curriculum. It might be helpful to teach students how to learn, before feeding them information without a solid method of digesting that information.
Schools don't want kids to discover peterson
schools don't want you to think learn or remember. The system is geared to produce mental peons.
these 2 minutes taught me more than the many hours ive spent searching how to remember things through videos, books, asking poeple i know etc.
This idea is included in the Charlotte Mason method of education.
Agree, well said!
Very good points, making you consciously read a chapter and then summarize what you understood after reading the chapter takes you to great lengths
Thanks. I was taking a lot of notes during the duration of the video. Will read them tonight and see what I learn from it.
This was my study strategy when I was studying at university.🙂
Everyone has their own way of studying as long as we're true to what we're doing. I can't say I fully agree with him. Do whatever works for you
Yes. He seems not open to the diversity of our minds, ways to learn, strategies to avoid distraction (taking note is one of them). His way is certainly very good, but it's not the only one.
Human psyche is complex...I guess an expert in psychology should know that....
@@catherinebastien Even though I totally see you guys' points and he is in fact kind of presenting this as ''the ultimate strategy'', I think it's still valuable what he is saying in terms of how your brain stores information. The more associations you can make with a concept, the more you ''solidify'' that concept in your mind. This is a general thinking principle and not just a principle of learning, hence you can adapt your (different) strategies with this knowledge. Peterson is not a truth speaker. But he is a speaker of valuable ideas and I appreciate him for that.
such simple but continuous effort can develop our brains. Great idea! Thanks Jordan.
Just like so many other things I have come to learn about so late in life, wish I had know this in my younger years, wish Jordan Peterson was around (in the public space) in my days.
Dude, i don't know if you will ever read this but, that was the best piece of advice i have ever gotten in my life!!! Thank you man
I definitely agree and it almost feels weird I haven't thought about it before. I'm not a student anymore and my memory is declining, so why not try to remember stuff I read? It makes me feel excited to see if it works
Great way to phrase the Feynman method
This Is Soo Helpful..Thank You🙏
Well said. Loved the idea, must try it starting from today.
Thanks for sharing this knowledge, as an English student I have been able to check this point, it is absolutely better to pay attention at maximum and after taking notes, in this way our brain is more efficient for remembering and the pieces of stuff are firmly fixed to our mind
Whenever I read a book, I not only highlight or underline, but I make notes in the margins. Anytime you write down something it helps you remember. I also do something else that has proven super helpful: I USE THE BLANK PAGES AT THE END OF A BOOK TO NOTE IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING along with the Page number. This gives me my own personal book review and I can refer to the book later and quickly have a synopsis of the book and an easy reference guide. It is true that any time you TEACH you remember best, but I think that if you stop too much, you can lose the overall "flavor" of the book.
Regarding your comment "I think that if you stop too much, you can lose the overall 'flavour' of the book", that's where the art of knowing where to stop comes in. If you're breaking the book down by discrete concepts, then you're getting to understand all of the essential components that make up the overall message that the writer of the book is attempting to convey. So, you might have to read a whole chapter or more to get to understand a complete concept, or it may only be a page or pages, or even a paragraph or paragraphs. However, If you're reading a book of fiction, or a book where a there is continual narrative, used to convey a message, then you WOULD want to read the book through without breaking it down (unless the dialogue or writing style, is not immediately intuitive, e.g. with literature such as Shakespeare).
Very helpful, thank you
Thank for the support
I find that taking notes on what I hear as I hear it helps me to be less distracted.
Not in the field of science.
@@AmitKumar-je7rn how does that have any relevance at all?
Structurize your knowledge.
Make category and hierarchy, map each things you learn.
Especially when your domain is extremely large and chaotic, like software or other engineering.
Without this, your knowledge will not be useful for a long time.
This is because details in engineering knowledge changes very rapidly.
If you have structurized your knowledge, you can just swap the part that has changed.
Do you have any examples of this or resources you could point me towards to improve in these areas you outlined? Thanks John
I always sat back and listened and visualized what I was learning about. I have no recall issues. I was told that I should take note, but I always felt that was distracting and I then couldn't pay attention to what was being said, and read between the lines.
Some of what I'm hearing I know, practicing them would be new. Really Thank You again
These ideas, concepts, and practices are even more effective when you are genuinely interested in the subject you’re reading. Also, daily reading helps as well. It gets easier when you practice reading more.
And you can convince yourself to be interested, even when you originally weren't.
This is how i study:
I learn something and then i put some teddy bears on the table and i give them a lecture lol
I pray someday the 🧸 will say, "got this" nodding his head...😂😂😂
Thank you
I will definitely try this
About lectures: Writing while listening works well for me. There is more than one way to do things.
It also depends on the topic. Remembering numbers or chemistry formulas is different than remembering bigger general ideas.
This will be challenging for me. That’s how I know I should try it.
That's excellent and most effective advice that I also believed but never practised and now I am going to do it.
Very helpful tips, Jordan! Thanks for sharing!
this is how I like to watch an educational videos. Short.
I got through nursing school and passed my NCLEX first try by taking notes during every single lecture. I would literally write as they were speaking and I’d speak it as I was writing. Read my notes and passed every exam besides one- the only one I didn’t take notes on.
So you disagree with him and it's better to take notes during the lecture as per you , also I wanted to ask how you were taking them like you was typing important points or keywords , because this is my 1st year in Nursing school , Appreciate your comment .
@@safokitaz3670 thank you for inquiring about my note taking. I don’t disagree with him completely and I respect him so much: but note taking during lecture worked wonders for me. I did a lot better in nursing school than many of my classmates who did not take notes. I used blue ink and would write nearly verbatim what was discussed in lecture. I would also record occasionally. Very seldom did I actually read the books. Find what works for you and stick with it. Congratulations for going to nursing school and I wish you the best- you’ll do great!!!!
Agree. And about good profs - they always give enough of short pauses during their lecture for students to right down correctly. The volumes and the nature of the information often require taking notes during the lecture, but really, during the pause given is the best.
Thank you for the video, it makes perfect sense "for me".
Most of my engineering professors seem to use their own info or way of going about a method that isn't necessarily par for par with the textbook, so it's hard to not take notes cause then I'd have to backup. Still figuring out the best way.
It's problematic with mathematical fields in general I'd say
The goal of attending a lecture is not to have notes from the lecture. The goal is to understand what is going on during the lecture. Spending time and energy taking notes decreases understanding. Also, if you prepare by understanding the textbook, it will be much easier to remember/reconstruct variations presented in the lecture.
I started doing this a few years ago by sheer happenstance then I came across this vid 😁 glad to know I’m doing something right
Me too ,are you a med student?
Tnx both comments and dr jordan
Your advice is wonderful, I would definitely want to try it.
The dear person that's reading this, we don't know each other but I wish you all the best in life❤ don't ever blame yourself, accept things and go forward. Your smile is precious and a key to a happy life...
All the best to you as well thank you for the awesome wishes I also wish you the same 🤙❤️🍀
Man, this helps me soooooooooooooo much ( there is not enough
O’s to express how much this helps me right now)
oh, I can't thank him enooough.....
I did this in the corporate world. It works. Understand what you're learning in a deep level and then it becomes engrained into your thoughts
Thank you.
I can see failing my exam with this trick (it is because the magnitude of the syllabus we have & time to read, thought through and then write..I would cover just 50% of syllabus at best)
Bhai one shots dekh..aur pyq laga uske baad time bache to extra questions karlena... these methods are only useful when you want to study actually...exam m full syllabus rahega 20% syllabus ka 100% samajhlene se kaam nhi chalne wala... Exam k baad agar iccha ho to firse dekhlenge... All the best👍
Yeah, It really depends on the subject and overall course
So you’re saying that I shouldn’t highlight every paragraph that I read?
All kidding aside, this is useful, I use to be a chronic highlighter but if you asked me what it was that I highlighted, after the chapter, I wouldn’t have remembered.
Same here. I used to highlight, underline , circle the important words in the text , in the end all I end up remembering is jumbled pieces of information which in turn confuse me even more .
Same here Zeze, now, I am trying this option.
HAHA.....
I've always taken notes since I became an adult. I like to make extensive compilations of acquired knowledge. I take notes and always will. When I was in elementary school and high-school always learned everything just by listening and understanding my teachers but as I grew older with more mundane stuff in my head. Family work visas immigration, love. Friends, appointments, college and all the rest notes became more relevant. I've always been able to take notes very quickly as I write very fast almost at the same time as it's been spoken and for that reason....so far so good. But we're all different. My method works for me
Thank you sir.
Notetakers are memorizers - they don’t “learn” but “retrieve” and store only information-an inefficient way to learn in the long run.
Do you have research to back that up? The idea that a note-taker can't go back and re-read or ponder their notes is without merit. Many note-takers write down a few key phrases during the lecture and then go back and "clean up their notes" (aka review and ponder the lecture as they decide how to phrase things in their own words). To say that "people who take notes" "don't learn" is to disparage people based on very little information. These days, such comments can take on a life of their own (going viral, etc.). I strongly caution against making this kind of damaging generalization and possibly politicizing note-taking in class. We already have people being attacked for wearing masks. I don't want to see people who are taking notes to start suffering the same fate.
We have lectures for 8-10 hours everyday 😂😂😂😂
l can relate
Thank you so much!
Very nice presentation ❤
I love this trick, but what if the professor gives like 20 equations to remember in one single lecture? :c
"That doesn't work in every discipline"
A calming video on How Bad parents are made ua-cam.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/v-deo.html
You should not remember all 20 equations. You should understand and remember the two/three ideas behind them. Then you can reconstruct all the equations. Most of the equations will be in your textbook? It is not smart to copy the textbook.
Advice for my JEE/NEET friends:
Don't do this unless you are starting your prep from 9th or maybe 10th
Who even bother about JEE/NEET?
Why
@@alienhere9044 more than 25+ lakh students every year?
If you don't want to take advice, don't
Don't be negative
@@SandeepSabarish because this technique requires much more time per topic
And with neet and jee having so much syllabus it would be nearly impossible to implement it on the whole syllabus
@@yashvardhanrao3182 But the reality is 99% of them don't even like to study science that's the reason after produce 10 lakh science student ( including so called IITians) every year india still have 0 Nobel prize in field of science whereas Harvard alone 60 Nobel in science .
Thank you for this information today sir
really helpful! thanks!
One day I will become the best
OK batman. Go for it.
If only I had the resources.
If you eat the book one page at a time you'll absorb more of the information. Just be sure to consume them in order so things don't get mixed up.
Hahahaha you the funny guy
(I think you should switch "eat" and "consume", I won't tell anybody)
A calming video on How Bad parents are made ua-cam.com/video/vdwR6sVRulk/v-deo.html
Very helpful encouragement,,I solute you,,I 'll start doing it 2moro
of course JP! You have to work, put effort, and focus on what you just perceived. THX!
Reading a book allows you to "recall" after reading a paragraph. The book is there so that if I cannot recall I can open the book back up. That is not the same as sitting in a live lecture to where 30 greats points can be exchanged but I will only remember two of them because of what I can recall. Sitting in a 90 minute lecture does not allow for full 'remembrance'. Note taking is critical. Notes trigger recall and memory. I understand the point but disagree with the process. Even when travelling we identify landmarks to recall the correct route. Note taking in itself is a science. I am not sure why a student would be encouraged not to take notes. The idea that I cannot take notes and listen at the same time but I am expected to listen for 90 minutes and coherently recall what was mentioned seems counterintuitive. I would have to hear more from JP on this topic specifically.
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Man! Uv'e gat a big heart. I felt touched when I heard of ur unselfish wisdom u spread selflessly
It’s funny that they displayed that all the “BUTs” but but but but 😂😂😂👏🏻
*Day one or one day.* *You decide.*
Thank you, this will really help me in my studies.
Thanks for sharing
well, the only "recall" I can make is press B in league of legends lmao
Hots>LoL
JP's talks are always based on "one size fits all" theory . It is simply wrong.