12/31/2023 0 Comments Calibre 50 tour usa![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() You have crash-landed on an alien ocean world, and the only way to go is down. Subnautica’s oceans range from sun drenched shallow coral reefs to treacherous deep-sea trenches, lava fields, and bio-luminescent underwater rivers. Manage your oxygen supply as you explore kelp forests, plateaus, reefs, and winding cave systems. The water teems with life: Some of it helpful, much of it harmful. Scavenge, Craft, and SurviveĪfter crash landing in your Life Pod, the clock is ticking to find water, food, and to develop the equipment you need to explore. Collect resources from the ocean around you. Craft diving gear, lights, habitat modules, and submersibles. Venture deeper and further form to find rarer resources, allowing you to craft more advanced items. Construct Underwater Habitatsīuild bases on the sea floor. Choose layouts and components, and manage hull-integrity as depth and pressure increase. Use your base to store resources, park vehicles, and replenish oxygen supplies as you explore the vast ocean. What caused you to crash? What is infecting the sea life? Who built the mysterious structures scattered around the ocean? Can you find a way to make it off the planet alive? Disrupt the Food Chain What happened to this planet? Signs abound that something is not right. The ocean teems with life: Use the ecosystem to help you. Lure and distract a threatening creature with a fresh fish, or simply swim as fast as you can to avoid gnashing jaws of roaming predators. Handle the Pressureīuild a Pressure Re-Active Waterproof Nanosuit, or PRAWN Suit, and explore extreme depth and heat. Modify the suit with mining drills, torpedo launchers, propulsion cannons, grappling hooks and more. Fear the NightĪs the sun goes down, the predators come out. The ocean is unforgiving of those caught unprepared in the darkness. Calibre 50 are an award-winning norteño quartet from Mazatlan, Sinaloa founded in 2010 by Eden Muñoz (vocals, accordion), Armando Ramos (guitars, vocals), Martín López (tuba), and Augusto (drums).Īreas that are safe to explore during the day become treacherous at night, but also reveal a beauty that those who hide from the darkness will never see. Their provocative name ("armor-piercing bullet") was chosen as a symbol for their music, whose strength they hoped would carry them across the border from Mexico north to the United States and south across Latin America. Even though many of their narcocorridos are officially banned from airplay in their home country, word of mouth and streaming have served to get their music to an ever-growing audience. Founded in 2010, the band started on the stages of small restaurants and local parties, where their theme song, "El Infiernito," opened the doors to airplay. Mazatlan" (a duet with Gerardo Ortiz) and "Callejero y Mujeriego," helped propel their 2010 debut album, Renovar o Morir, to a strong chart showing and also the Lo Nuestro Award for Regional Mexican New Artist of the Year. 1 of14 Calibre 50's Eden Muñoz performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day.Each album has charted since then, including three (2012's Grandes Exitos, 2014's Contigo, and the following year's Historia de la Calle) that placed in the Top 200 and topped the Mexican Regional Albums chart. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 2 of14 Calibre 50's Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 3 of14 Calibre 50's Augusto (drums) and Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 4 of14 Calibre 50's Martín López (tuba) performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 5 of14 Calibre 50's Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 6 of14 Calibre 50's Eden Muñoz performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 7 of14 Calibre 50's Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 8 of14 Calibre 50's Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 9 of14 Calibre 50's Eden Muñoz performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. Steve Gonzales/Houston Chronicle Show More Show Less 10 of14 Calibre 50's Armando Ramos performs at Rodeo Houston’s Go Tejano Day. ![]()
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