@buchiko3150: ✅殿堂服全種類登場‼️ㅤ #荒野行動 #荒野GOGOFES #荒野の光

ぶち子│討伐隊
ぶち子│討伐隊
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Region: JP
Sunday 24 May 2026 08:26:55 GMT
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0109_ayachii
🐧あやちぃ☘️🫧🍏🍎🍥🌻🦖 :
動画かっこいい✨✨ 殿堂ほしくなっちゃうからやめてぇぇ🥺~w
2026-05-24 08:59:17
14
ftyxk
かずこ :
レイアスカない🥲
2026-05-30 17:48:51
1
klnpuri19
かみかみすんすん :
なんてゆーゲームですか
2026-06-01 03:17:41
0
rice_ball_12
ちーすこう💫😈 :
限界を越えろ
2026-05-29 08:10:14
0
manato5428
manato_0802 :
こんなお金があるのずこいな
2026-05-26 14:37:29
3
user7407168567665
りひドラ🐈‍⬛ :
これめっちゃ好き
2026-05-27 03:29:22
0
gadmjd1
好 :
転スラ殿堂来てくれ
2026-06-01 06:13:16
0
qlil___zlo
🌙 :
凛聖のアリアは??
2026-05-24 18:37:09
0
user9354868677745
粋 :
五条2種類あるのえぐいよな
2026-05-30 01:52:57
1
._93340
Asuha_0318 :
まじ一個ぐらい分けて欲しい
2026-05-29 08:40:41
1
usa._.mi
🐇⸒⸒ あ り す 🚂 :
めっちゃ映像綺麗に見えるのは気のせいですか?👀 🤍 🤍
2026-05-24 22:51:57
0
suvzv_
☦︎︎ :
エヴァかっけえ
2026-05-28 09:41:50
0
tiizunomeikenn
チーズ :
かっこよい殿堂服
2026-05-24 23:01:11
0
takkii423
たっきー🍺 :
超異世界バトル!!!
2026-05-28 04:07:21
0
slime11295
Slime :
かっこいい
2026-05-26 10:23:53
0
cakehdn0
ソーシャル・D・スタンス :
編集うま!
2026-05-27 05:08:06
0
ko._.o50
こた :
ヤマタノオロチかわいい🩷
2026-05-28 13:26:27
1
sr_runax
【狙撃姫】くれあ :
凄すぎます😳
2026-05-24 08:30:59
0
yu_ka7no
ゆうかなのだ :
ラリってます?
2026-06-03 07:22:00
0
user4383374831980
ラリってる〜 :
かっけぇ
2026-05-24 21:44:02
0
user947686903525
微少女あやか :
かっこいい✨
2026-05-25 22:09:01
0
oaksnxhcjdjdbvxjxx
oaksnxhcjdjdbvxjxx :
いちばん新しい殿堂の衣装は過去一良い。
2026-05-24 16:57:25
0
user6741060959527
♡【Kohaku】♡ :
かっこよすぎる...!
2026-05-24 16:44:23
0
___000214
なちゃん :
アビスハブられると思ったらちゃんといた笑
2026-05-24 14:56:29
0
ma31na1
恋ちてる💘まなやで♡ :
かっこいい❤️
2026-05-24 08:55:05
0
To see more videos from user @buchiko3150, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Episode 8 of our journey through China's 56 ethnic groups — and this episode is for the ones who want to go deeper. Three of China's least-known peoples. Three of its most extraordinary cultural treasures. 🌏 The She people of Fujian and Zhejiang carry one of the most unusual origin stories of any ethnic group in China — and they tell it with enormous pride. According to She legend, their ancestor was a divine creature named Panhu — a magical dog who performed great deeds for an ancient emperor and was rewarded with a human princess as his wife. The She trace their entire identity back to this union. And that identity is worn, literally, on their bodies. The Phoenix Robe — worn by She women at ceremonies and weddings — is one of the most dramatic traditional costumes in all of China. Every element recreates the plumage of a phoenix: embroidered panels cascade down the front, layered silver ornaments catch the light, and towering headdresses complete the transformation. She women are also master weavers of caídài — narrow decorative bands in vivid colors, woven with geometric patterns that encode messages of love, blessing, and identity. And their mountain songs — sung in antiphonal call-and-response style, voices bouncing across forested valleys — were historically so central to She courtship that a young man who couldn't hold his own in a singing duel had almost no chance of winning a wife. Music wasn't entertainment. It was the language of love. The Sui people of Guizhou hold something that stops scholars and linguists in their tracks every time — the Shui Shu, the Water Script. It is the only logographic writing system outside of Chinese characters that is still in active use anywhere on earth today. Written in forms that resemble ancient Chinese characters held up to a mirror — reversed, rotated, transformed — the Water Script is used exclusively by Sui priests called Shui Shu Xian Sheng to record ceremonial texts, astronomical calendars, and divination practices passed down over thousands of years. Only a few hundred people in the world can read it. Think about what that means — an entire writing system, ancient and complete, kept alive by a tiny community in the mountains of Guizhou, while the rest of the world moved on. And the Sui New Year — Duan Jie — is celebrated in autumn, the earliest New Year festival of any ethnic group in China. Scholars have called it
Episode 8 of our journey through China's 56 ethnic groups — and this episode is for the ones who want to go deeper. Three of China's least-known peoples. Three of its most extraordinary cultural treasures. 🌏 The She people of Fujian and Zhejiang carry one of the most unusual origin stories of any ethnic group in China — and they tell it with enormous pride. According to She legend, their ancestor was a divine creature named Panhu — a magical dog who performed great deeds for an ancient emperor and was rewarded with a human princess as his wife. The She trace their entire identity back to this union. And that identity is worn, literally, on their bodies. The Phoenix Robe — worn by She women at ceremonies and weddings — is one of the most dramatic traditional costumes in all of China. Every element recreates the plumage of a phoenix: embroidered panels cascade down the front, layered silver ornaments catch the light, and towering headdresses complete the transformation. She women are also master weavers of caídài — narrow decorative bands in vivid colors, woven with geometric patterns that encode messages of love, blessing, and identity. And their mountain songs — sung in antiphonal call-and-response style, voices bouncing across forested valleys — were historically so central to She courtship that a young man who couldn't hold his own in a singing duel had almost no chance of winning a wife. Music wasn't entertainment. It was the language of love. The Sui people of Guizhou hold something that stops scholars and linguists in their tracks every time — the Shui Shu, the Water Script. It is the only logographic writing system outside of Chinese characters that is still in active use anywhere on earth today. Written in forms that resemble ancient Chinese characters held up to a mirror — reversed, rotated, transformed — the Water Script is used exclusively by Sui priests called Shui Shu Xian Sheng to record ceremonial texts, astronomical calendars, and divination practices passed down over thousands of years. Only a few hundred people in the world can read it. Think about what that means — an entire writing system, ancient and complete, kept alive by a tiny community in the mountains of Guizhou, while the rest of the world moved on. And the Sui New Year — Duan Jie — is celebrated in autumn, the earliest New Year festival of any ethnic group in China. Scholars have called it "the living fossil of the Chinese New Year" — a window into how these celebrations looked before they evolved into the Spring Festival the world knows today. And the Tu people of Qinghai — you will recognize them instantly, and only them, by what they wear on their arms. Tu traditional costume features sleeves made of seven concentric rings of color — red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet — a complete rainbow wrapped around each arm. In the austere brown-and-gold mountain landscapes of Qinghai province, a Tu woman in full traditional dress looks like a living sunrise. It is one of the most visually striking traditional costumes of any ethnic group anywhere in the world. Their pan xiu — coiled embroidery — is equally extraordinary: silk threads are coiled and stitched into raised three-dimensional floral patterns with a precision that takes years to master, and is now listed as a national intangible cultural heritage. And the Tu Nadun Festival — a harvest celebration held across multiple villages in late summer — lasts over a month, making it the longest continuous folk festival of any ethnic group in China. Thirty days of ceremony, masked dance, and communal feasting, giving thanks to the earth for another year of abundance. Three groups. A divine dog ancestor. A writing system only hundreds can read. And the most colorful sleeves on earth. Which one are you most drawn to?

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