A promo on a verge of bankruptcy or a big loss or closing, often obscure brands/restaurants/places/businesses. Used as one of the last strategies as a desperation for profit
Has a high change to be permanently closed if you paused your visit for too long at an unspecified period, or the branches are already permanently closed in some places
"I got a discount voucher from my favourite payment app loyalty for a little obscure restaurant and when I visited, unfortunately the branch I visited was permanently closed and a new tenant replaced them. It was a desperate promo"
"I saw a promo for an obscure buffet / all you can eat restaurant on my digital bank app and when I searched the branch in my uni city, it's already closed forever a long time ago. I'm sure that this is a desperate promo"
An Indonesian brand of tortilla chips, made as the replacement for Doritos due to Fritolay leaving Indonesia because the partnership with Indofood had expired. Uses the same recipe as Doritos
"Basically, Maxicorn has the same great taste as Doritos, but with a different package and branding"
An Indonesian term for something eaten with carbohydrate-rich foods. Has no equivalent to English and any translators translate this as "side dish" but this isn't accurate as it should be eaten together with something like rice, noodles/pastas, and bread, not separately. But this term is less commonly used to refer toppings or fillings of something like bread/flatbread and spring rolls
"I eat fried chicken and nuggets as my rice lauk"
"Mutton is a great lauk for flatbreads"
"Pepperoni is one of the mostly used lauks in pizzas"
"Half-cooked eggs are good for noodles lauk"
Pronounced "rërënggan"/"르ë¦ê°"/"reureunggan" (ë is schwa)
Basically a Javanese decorative text bracket for titles. There are variations of this bracket, it can be anything including eagles, but the peacock tail one being the most popular and the default style for most Javanese fonts
Usually used for aesthetic letterings
If you search cute art on Pinterest, you may encounter some usernames with rerenggan, which looks like this:
ê§ name ê§
Basically on most, if not all, cute communities
A cute Japanese font that was used in some English translation of Japanese games in the PS2/Gamecube/Wii era. Has Times New Roman's exclamation and question marks, making it look comical, and this font looks adventurous and girly
Sometimes being the primary font, sometimes being the tertiary font (meaning less frequently used)
Still used today, but less common and you can find it on Chinese kids fashion and maybe some Chinese fashion for women
"Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life, Romancing Saga (PS2), and Tales of Symphonia (GCN) uses DF Fuun as the primary font"
"Breath of Fire: Dragon's Quarter uses DF Fuun as the damage/heal/effect font"
"Some girl kids fashion including underwears uses DF Fuun in their texts"