Results for “782 gear”
Standard-issue field load-bearing kit — pack, belt, pouches, the lot.
Unattended kit. Leave it, lose it.
A Marine's individual field load-bearing equipment.
Cold-weather comfort gear.
A troop obsessed with buying tactical gear.
placeholder
Steroids and performance-enhancing drugs — 'running gear' means a steroid cycle.
A low-level character decked out in gear way above its level.
PKing in cheap gear purely to annoy someone and waste their supplies, not to win.
Reskinning your gear so it looks fire without touching the stats.
Your character's drip — cosmetic gear that overrides how your actual stuff looks.
A gear set whose bonus fires off on a random chance, not on demand.
Warzone's in-match shop — trade cash for gear and lives.
Fully geared up with good armour, scope and attachments.
A round where the team saves cash instead of buying full gear.
Clothes, gear, your outfit.
Pit-head winding gear — originally the horse-powered version.
Pellets — small wraps of crack, heroin or gear ready to sell.
Changing gears in a heavy truck without using the clutch.
Mature content — open to view.
A man — most often gay — who lives the leather subculture: the gear, the BDSM, the whole identity.
The service role that cares for and shines leather gear — honoured with its own International Mr. Bootblack title since 1993.
A room kitted out with BDSM gear where scenes happen.
Lifting with minimal supportive gear (belt/wraps only).
Officers in riot gear.
Mature content — open to view.
An inspection of gear pulled out of one's bags.
Communications gear or the troops who run it.
Full combat gear worn into the field.
Gear up and get through a hard situation.
The standing metal locker for a troop's gear.
A hard crash that scatters your gear across the slope.
A round where your team saves money instead of buying good gear.
Flashy, expensive designer gear worn loud to flex — UK slang leaning a bit gaudy.
Wearing technical hiking and outdoor gear as everyday fashion — fleeces, shell jackets, and trail shoes in the city.
Clothes, in British/London slang — short for garments, usually meaning fly gear.
Brand-new, never-worn gear — especially sneakers still in original condition with the box.
Clothing, your threads or good gear, with roots in a Quechua word.
Dressed up sharp in good gear — fully suited and looking the part.
Rare, premium or deep-cut — coveted gear, art or music for true heads.