Today, an event so amazing no one on MapleRoyals will cease to believe, except the witnesses of their very own eyes. Something happened that I believe would only occur on the pavement of the wonderful FM in MapleRoyals. So me, Hyourinmaru was having a little discussion with Plenty about the their own definition of rich and poor. I said my poor was 10mill, Hyourinmaru said it would be 300k. Plenty, as beautiful and wonderful as she is, with a big heart gave Hyourinmaru 10mill. This was such an act of kindness, I would be of stupor to not act upon this action. I chased after Plenty and traded her, as dirt-poor as I am, I offered 100k mesos, to replenish 1% of the 10mill that she had kindly given out to Hyourinmaru. This an act purely out of my belief that she is a person that deserves to be respected from her actions. However, something unexpected happened, something amazing, something of such a degree of surprise my brain would have least expected it, as if it had popped up from the void. (See spoiler for full story) Spoiler Something had popped out of the Plenty's hidden treasury everyone dreams about. And before I could realize what it was or what happened, Plenty traded me. She gave me 100mill in return for 100k, which is probably the least expected action I had expected. My feelings were trolled, rolled, lawn mowered, and thrown aside like Fermat's last theorem. I was very grateful that she had helped me finally achieve 1b mesos out of the extraordinary, I can finally get the dream chair of mine if anyone's willing to sell it. I am eternally grateful to this very action of Plenty's actions, I will someday return those 100mill(even though it was 95m after taxes)~I will return it someday Plenty~ -Mudkipz
Fermat's Last Theorem says that the equation an + bn = cn has no positive integer solutions when n is an integer greater than two. The problem has a special part in mathematical history because in 1637 a French lawyer named Pierre de Fermat, upon reading a book on Diophantine equations called Arithmetica, scrawled in the margin the above claim, adding that he had ‘discovered a truly marvellous proof of this, which this margin is too narrow to contain’. This is notable because it wasn't until three hundred and fifty-eight years later that a mathematician managed to prove the conjecture (making it a theorem), despite tremendous effort put forth by practically anyone interested in number theory (and many others) in the interim. The man who finally proved it was one Sir Andrew Wiles1 in 1995, doing so using mathematics that, at the time of Fermat, hadn't even been conceived. This, naturally, makes one wonder whether Fermat truly had a successful proof at all. 1 He was knighted because of this tremendous achievement.