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History Traveler
History Traveler
7 w

How Many Māori Iwi (Tribes) Are There in Aotearoa/New Zealand?
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How Many Māori Iwi (Tribes) Are There in Aotearoa/New Zealand?

  In New Zealand’s North and South Islands, each Māori tribe (iwi) has its own history, founding ancestor or ancestress, tribal territory (rohe), and governance structure, often based around a tribal council known as rūnanga.   The role of Māori tribes has evolved considerably in recent centuries. From the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, a turning point in the history of Māori-Pākehā (New Zealanders of European descent), to the most recent initiatives to promote and preserve Māori language and traditions, Māori tribes continue to influence New Zealand’s politics, particularly on matters of land rights and resource management.   What Do We Mean by Iwi? A Māori pā (village), 1880s. Source: Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa   The Māori name for “tribe” is iwi, which translates as “nation” or “people.” The tribe was the foundation of Māori life before European contact and its largest political grouping. All Māori tribes trace their origins back to the Polynesian sailors who arrived in Aotearoa/New Zealand in their large ocean-going canoes (waka) during the 13th century.   Tribal names honor Māori ancestors, both male and female, and names are usually accompanied by a prefix. The most common prefixes are Ngāti, Ngā, Ngāi, and Te Āti (“the people of” or “the offspring of”), as well as Te Whānau (meaning “the family of”), Te Kāhui (“the assemblage of”), or Ngā Uri (“the descendants of”). The name of the Ngāpuhi iwi, for instance, the largest tribe of the North Island, translates as “The People of Puhi.”   Māori treasure box (papahou) owned by an unspecified tribe from the Bay of Plenty region in the North Island, 18th century. Source: The Metropolitan Museum of Art   The name of Te Whānau-ā-Apanui, one of the tribes from the Bay of Plenty, can be translated as “The Family of Apanui.” In pre-contact Māori society, each iwi consisted of several related hapū, that is, several clans (or descent groups) that controlled a defined portion of their iwi’s tribal territory. In times of war, the clans came together to defend their sea fisheries, their sacred volcanoes, lakes, rivers, and streams. Marriages were often the key to resolving inter-tribal disputes over land and natural resources and ensuring the survival of the hapū’s members.   Although some clans moved according to seasonal changes, various hapū usually lived in a single pā (village). During the Musket Wars, Māori clans fortified their pā with multiple rows of single wood palisades, ditches, ramparts, elevated defensive terraces, and fighting stages to protect themselves from attacks by musket-armed enemy tribes. Such villages became known as “gunfighter pā.”   Mount Ngauruhoe, on the North Island, is sacred to the Ngāti Tūwharetoa tribe, the custodian of the central plateau, photograph by Matthew Buchanan, 2019. Source: Unsplash   As the population increased, so did the various hapū. In some cases, larger hapū could split into smaller ones. It also happened that small splinter groups, originating from intertribal wars or forced migration, would merge. In turn, each hapū comprised at least one (but often more than one) extended family, which the Māori call whānau, and which continues to form the foundation and basic unit of Māori society. Sometimes large and powerful families, with leaders strong enough to stake their claim, would evolve into a clan, that is, one hapū, in its own right.   The North and the South Islands Map of New Zealand showing the North and the South Islands, as well as Stewart Island, south of the South Island. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Aotearoa/New Zealand consists of two main islands, the North and the South Islands, and more than 700 smaller islands, including Stewart Island, New Zealand’s third-largest island south of the South Island across the Foveaux Strait. The history of the North and South Islands and their varied landscapes is interwoven with the stories, myths, and traditions passed down from one Māori generation to another, from one tribe to another. The Māori name for the North Island, for example, is Te Ika-a-Māui, “the fish of Māui.”   According to Māori myths, the North Island was fished up by Māui, the famous trickster hero of Polynesian and Māori mythology, during a fishing expedition in the Pacific Ocean. His brothers refused to take him with them, so he hid in the canoe. When he revealed himself to them, they were already out at sea.   Rotorua on the North Island, photograph by Yoann Laheurte, 2019. Source: Unsplash   Here Māui cast a fish hook into the deep waters of the ocean and caught a fish: according to some traditions, it was a flounder, and according to others a stingray. The fish became the North Island. Māui’s brothers disobeyed his prayers and chopped up the fish, cutting off its tail, gills, head, and fins. Hence, the island’s uneven and rugged landscape. The southern part of the North Island, where Wellington was founded between 1839 and 1840, is the head of the fish. The Northland region, home to the Ngāpuhi tribe, represents the tail of the fish, while its backbone runs from Rotorua, with its hot mud pools, geysers, and lakes, to Lake Taupō. Mt Maungapōhatu, whose rugged bush ranges are sacred to the Ngāi Tūhoe, is the heart of the fish.   Stewart Island (Rakiura), 2020, photograph by Sébastien Goldberg. Source: Unsplash   While the North Island is believed to be Māui’s fish, the South Island is Māui’s canoe. It is indeed known as Te Waka-a-Māui, “the canoe of Māui.” The southern tip of the South Island represents the stern of the canoe, while its northern part north is the canoe’s prow.   Stewart Island, the hilly and forested island 30 kilometers (18-19 miles) south of the South Island, is thought to represent the canoe’s anchor. Today, the Māori call it Rakiura, which means “glowing skies,” but its original Māori name is Te Punga o Te Waka a Māui, which translates as “the anchor stone of Māui’s canoe.”   The Largest Māori Tribes of the North Island Hōne Heke, one of Māori’s most influential leaders, was a member of the Ngāpuhi tribe, watercolor by Joseph Jenner Merrett, 1845. Source: Wikimedia Commons   Three of the four largest Māori tribes by population live in New Zealand’s North Island. The Ngāpuhi iwi is Aotearoa’s largest and most influential tribe. Bounded to the east by the Pacific Ocean and to the west by the Tasman Sea, its rohe (territory) occupies the island’s Northland region, the Winterless North, as many call it. Ngāpuhi’s territory stretches east to west from the Bay of Islands to Hokianga Harbor, the latter known among the Māori as Te Kohanga o Te Tai Tokerau, “the nest of the northern people.”   To the south, Ngāphui territory also includes present-day Whangārei, New Zealand’s northernmost city. The Ngāpuhi trace their ancestry back to three canoes, the Matawhaorua, Mataatua, and Ngātokimatawhaorua waka. Kupe, the legendary Polynesian explorer, entered Hokianga Harbor in his Matawhaorua canoe. With his wife Kuramārōtini, he was the first to discover New Zealand, which he named Aotearoa, “the land of the long white cloud.”   Whale at Ōkārito. Source: Canterbury Museum   The second largest Māori tribe is the Ngāti Porou, the easternmost iwi on the North Island. Its name translates as “the People of Porou,” after their most important ancestor, Porourangi. Their other founding ancestor, Paikea, is said to have sailed to Aotearoa from Hawaiki on the back of a huge whale.   The Māori claim that when Māui fished up the North Island the first peak to emerge from the depths of the Ocean, the first bit of land to be lit by the rising sun was Te Ara ki Hikurangi, known among the Pākehā population as Mt Hikurangi. Today, Hikurangi is the most sacred place of the Ngāti Porou. The tribe’s rohe runs along the coast from Gisborne (and the Te Toka-a-Taiau rock) in the south to Pōtikirua in the north. In its southern part, it extends inland to Waikaremoana.   Mt Ruapehu, in the heart of the North Island, 2021, photograph by Luca Calderone. Source: Unsplash   The fourth largest group is not a tribe, but a tribal league known as the Waikato Confederation. The confederation’s tribal rohe occupies a large area of the North Island, the Waikato region, and extends along New Zealand’s longest river, Waikato, which connects Mt Ruapehu to Lake Taupō. Among the 33 iwi (or hapū, sub-tribes, as some tend to call them) included in the confederation are the Ngāti Mahuta (the first Māori king, Te Wherowhero, belonged to this iwi), Ngāti Tamainupō (named after the tribe’s founding ancestor, Māori chief Tamainu-pō), Ngāti Māhanga (beloved children’s writer and illustrator Melanie Drewery is affiliated with the Ngāti Māhanga), and Ngāti Te Ata (the tribe of one of New Zealand’s most important female leaders Dame Ngāneko Kaihau Minhinnick). All these tribes descend from those who first came to New Zealand aboard the Tainui waka.   The South Island Māori representatives of the tribes of Te Tauihu (the Top of the South Island): Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Toa, and Ngāti Kuia tribes from the South Island, photograph by Frederick Nelson Jones, 1916. Source: Nelson Provincial Museum   Of the more than 100 Māori tribes in Aotearoa/New Zealand, the third largest by population is the Ngāi Tahu. The tribe’s name translates as “the people of Tahu,” after Tahpōtiki, one of Paikea’s grandsons (or great-grandsons). The members of the Ngāi Tahu share their ancestors with the Ngāti Porou from the North Island and trace their identity back to Paikea who arrived in New Zealand on the back of a whale to escape his murderous brother.   The story of the Ngāi Tahu is one of migrations, battles, betrayals, and intermarriages with other tribes. Today, their tribal territory covers much of the South Island, stretching from Stewart Island (Rakiura) in the south to Kahurangi Point, the northernmost point of the island’s west coast.  Originally, however, the Ngāi Tahu were a northern tribe from the Gisborne District.   According to Ngāi Tahu stories, Lake Tekapo (Takapō) was dug up by Rākaihautū, an explorer of the Waitaha tribe, later absorbed by the Ngāi Tahu, photograph by Tobias Keller, 2016. Source: Unsplash   From the North Island’s East Coast, they began their migration southward, first to the fertile Heretaunga region near present-day Hastings, then to Wellington, where they settled and ruled the area with other tribes. Eventually, in the early 18th century, some Ngāi Tahu left the North Island, crossed the Cook Strait, and landed on the South Island, Te Wai Pounamu, as it is known among the Māori. Each move was accompanied by bloodshed.   During the early years of their occupation of the South Island, however, the Ngāi Tahu deliberately intermarried with the original resident tribes, learning their traditions and adopting their customs, particularly those of the Waitaha people, such as their understanding of wind patterns.   The Top of the South Island  Marlborough Sounds, the ancestral lands of the Ngāti Kuia, one of the tribes of Te Tauihu (the Top of the South Island, photograph by Mark De Jong, 2019. Source: Unsplash   The top of the South Island is known among the Māori Te Tauihu o Te Waka a Māui, “the Prow of the Canoe of Māui.” Despite being separated from the North Island by the Cook Strait, it is what we could call a transitional area in terms of tribal organization. Most of the iwi living in this region have deep ties with the North Island tribes. Some of them, such as the Ngāti Toa, Te Ātiawa, and Ngāti Koata (“the people of Koata,” named after their founding ancestress), migrated southward from the Taranaki, Waikato, and Wellington regions of the North Island.   The Ngāti Tama, for instance, were originally from Taranaki, and crossed the Cook Strait in the 1820s before participating in the 1835 invasion of the Chatham Islands, the homeland of the Moriori, along with the Ngati Mutunga.   Most of the tribes from the Top of the South Island migrated south from the North Island’s Taranaki region, pictured here, on North Island, photograph by Raquel Moss, 2021. Source: Unsplash   The Rangitāne’s rohe occupies different regions across New Zealand’s two islands. In the North Island, their lands stretch from the mouth of the Rangitikei River in the Manawatū region to the Ruahine Ranges in the east. They also extend into the Horowhenua district to the west and the Wairarapa region in the southeastern corner of the North Island. On the South Island, the Rangitāne’s rohe occupies a significant part of Marlborough (known among Māori as Te Tauihu-o-te-waka), one of the South Island’s 16 regions, including cities like Nelson and Picton and several national parks. The Top of the South Island is also home to two other major tribes, the Ngāti Apa ki te Rā Tō, Te Rūnanga o Ngāti Rarua, and the Ngāti Kuia.   Māori warriors performing a Haka for U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon E. Panetta, photograph by Erin A. Kirk-Cuomo, 2012. Source: Wikimedia Commons   The latter is believed to be the oldest (and largest) iwi in the area. Its rohe stretches from Pelorus Sound (the Hoiere), part of the network of submerged valleys known as the Marlborough Sounds, at the island’s north-easternmost point, to the Nelson Lakes National Park in the south and Taitapu on the west coast.   From the northernmost districts of the North Island to the southernmost regions of the South Island, Māori tribes (iwi) and their leaders continue to influence New Zealand’s politics, representing Māori interests and determination to preserve their language and culture among non-Māori New Zealanders.
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The People's Voice Feed
The People's Voice Feed
7 w

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COVID-Vaccinated Kids Face 23% Surge in VAIDS, Official Study Reveals

A bombshell study reveals that COVID-vaccinated children face a 23% surge in vaccine-acquired immune deficiency syndrome (VAIDS), with official data exposing a significant rise in autoimmune diagnoses following vaccination. Published in Pediatric Rheumatology, the large-scale [...] The post COVID-Vaccinated Kids Face 23% Surge in VAIDS, Official Study Reveals appeared first on The People's Voice.
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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
7 w

Mike Johnson Turns Around Jake Tapper's Hunter Biden 'Whatabouting' In EPIC Fashion—WATCH!
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Mike Johnson Turns Around Jake Tapper's Hunter Biden 'Whatabouting' In EPIC Fashion—WATCH!

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7 w

DHS Drops Jaw-Dropping VIDEO: Marine Hero's Tragic End At Hands Of Cartel Sparks OUTRAGE!
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DHS Drops Jaw-Dropping VIDEO: Marine Hero's Tragic End At Hands Of Cartel Sparks OUTRAGE!

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BlabberBuzz Feed
7 w

WATCH: Dem Gubernatorial-Hopeful Drops First Campaign Ad—Torches 'Political Nonsense!'
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WATCH: Dem Gubernatorial-Hopeful Drops First Campaign Ad—Torches 'Political Nonsense!'

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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

“If You Felt Like You Had No One Cheering For You…” Heartwarming Dad Gives Every Graduate A Fanfare Of Applause
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“If You Felt Like You Had No One Cheering For You…” Heartwarming Dad Gives Every Graduate A Fanfare Of Applause

During some of life’s toughest moments, a showing of care and support from loved ones can make a world of difference. The same is also true of the best moments in life, like a graduation. It doesn’t matter if someone is graduating from kindergarten, high school, or college — this huge step forward in life deserves to be celebrated. At Cassandra’s own college graduation, her dad proved just how much he understands this to be true. As you might expect, Dad went all out once it was Cassandra’s turn to walk across the stage. But here is the thing… he started to cheer long before his daughter’s name was announced. Why? Because he wanted to make sure that every single graduate had someone cheering them on that day. Witness this wholesome dad’s thoughtful gesture in the video below! @cassandrra_ if you felt like you had no one cheering for you, just know my dad definitely was #csulb #graduation #nuestragraduacion ♬ What Was I Made For? (Epilogue) [Instrumental Version] – Mark Ronson & Andrew Wyatt If Dad got tired from all of that cheering, it never showed. He continued to do so even after Cassandra walked across the stage. In this clip, we get a glimpse at some of the other graduating students. Turns out, a clip is all we need to see just how much they appreciate the love radiating from this caring dad. Thoughtful Dad Goes All Out to Show Support for His Daughter (and Every Other Student) on Graduation Day Not everyone has someone to show up for them, for whatever reason, so little moments like this can mean a lot. TikTok “As someone whose parents didn’t show up to her graduations, I always looked for someone in the crowd to be my ‘parent.’ This would have healed my broken heart,” someone in the comments shares. Another adds, “That’s a man who knows that just showing up matters. Even if he’s showing up for a total stranger.” You can find the source of this story’s featured image here! The post “If You Felt Like You Had No One Cheering For You…” Heartwarming Dad Gives Every Graduate A Fanfare Of Applause appeared first on InspireMore.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
7 w

Husband “Annoyed By Foster Puppies” Caught In Precious Bonding Moment
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Husband “Annoyed By Foster Puppies” Caught In Precious Bonding Moment

The Denson Farm in Iron Mountain, Michigan, is home to 35 chickens, three horses, four dogs, two barn cats, and one conure. They are also a registered foster dog home. Serena Denson estimates the number of foster dogs to be “too many to count.” While she loves fostering dogs and puppies, her husband rolls his eyes each time she mentions a new batch of foster puppies. But he always melts. @serenadenson I guess he’s a keeper. #adoptdontshop #fosteringsaveslives #goodhusband #reel #fyp #puppies #puppiesoftiktok ♬ original sound – highschool simulator The foster puppies chase him around the yard as he tosses stray fallen branches. It is easy to see why having so many pups chasing him around the farm is annoying. He can barely move without tiny balls of energy weaving in and out between his legs. Every chore means chase time for them. The little dogs know nothing at that age beyond running, jumping, biting, and playing. He might be annoyed, but watch his feet. He is careful not to step on any rambunctious, moving trip hazards. After the work is done, it is playtime. He might think no one is looking. Getting down on the ground, he plays with the foster puppies as if he enjoys them. While he is rolling on the ground playing with the puppies, he has a whole vocabulary of baby talk that he unleashes on them. Being an older dog on Denson Farm means babysitting duty. Watching the family dogs interact as they play with the foster puppies is heartwarming. @serenadenson Puppies started getting adopted today and I’m sad ♬ Ponchielli Dance of the Hours – Aura Classica As if they don’t have enough animals on the farm, the Densons occasionally bring shelter dogs home for weekend romps. The dogs run around the farm with the family pets and have a grand time. @serenadenson Two black puppies, Theo and Lyla, and the brown larger pup with blue collar, Rip, are all hoping they have homes for Christmas! @Northwoods Animal Shelter IR #fosterpuppies #puppiesoftiktok #shelterpuppy #shelterdog #adoptme #adoptdontshop #playtimefun ♬ Linus And Lucy – Take 1 – Vince Guaraldi Trio He might pretend to be grumpy, but he has the biggest heart. Please share. You can find the source of this story’s featured image here. The post Husband “Annoyed By Foster Puppies” Caught In Precious Bonding Moment appeared first on InspireMore.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
7 w

Project Veritas TRICKS David Hogg; exposes Biden’s hidden puppet master
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Project Veritas TRICKS David Hogg; exposes Biden’s hidden puppet master

Project Veritas has dropped yet another undercover video, this time tricking Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg into revealing secrets regarding former President Joe Biden’s mental decline as well as who was really running the show. “The foundational question for me is, like, how corrupt is the DNC if so many people knew, or few people knew, about Biden?” the undercover journalist asked Hogg. “I think the fact of the matter is the DNC is always going to be a campaign arm of the president ultimately. The bigger issue was like the inner circle that was around Biden,” Hogg replied, adding, “Like Jill Biden’s chief of staff had an enormous amount of power.” Former White House employee Deterrian Jones was also duped by the undercover journalist, chiming in that he would “avoid” Anthony Bernal, Jill Biden’s chief of staff, as he was “scary.” “He’s just a shadowy, Wizard of Oz-type figure,” Jones told the undercover reporter. “I knew how he looked, but the general public wouldn’t know how this man looked. But he wielded an enormous amount of power. And I can’t stress to you how much power he had at the White House.” “This one was a very interesting one,” BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales says. “It was a male undercover journalist who somehow was able to seduce, or otherwise convince, David Hogg.” “Maybe we need to start talking to Anthony Bernal,” she continues. “He’s a veteran staffer of both the Obama and Clinton administrations, he was Biden’s deputy campaign manager during the 2024 presidential campaign.” Gonzales also notes that Bernal was “only one of four aids at the Rehoboth Beach House on July 18, when Biden was coerced to withdraw from the election.” “So very clearly a part of the inner, inner circle, part of the very, very big decision for Joe Biden to step down and/or at least withdraw his name from the 2024 campaign,” she adds. Want more from Sara Gonzales?To enjoy more of Sara's no-holds-barred take to news and culture, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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The Blaze Media Feed
7 w

Chuck Todd rips into Democrats for ignoring and marginalizing males and white voters for decades
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Chuck Todd rips into Democrats for ignoring and marginalizing males and white voters for decades

A former NBC News host mocked Democrats for having to use anthropologists to understand male voters after more than a decade of marginalizing and ignoring the white male vote. Chuck Todd made the comments while being interviewed by Matt Lewis on his YouTube show. Todd made fun of the Democrats for beginning to use curse words in an attempt to pivot toward those voters that lost them the 2024 election. 'You spent 15 years essentially ignoring that vote, and in fact, not only ignoring it — interest groups going out of their way to marginalize that demographic group.' "They're having to use anthropologists to figure out how to appeal to white men!" said Todd. "How do we talk to this strange breed of American citizen that we've never wanted their vote before, but now we do?" He went on to recall a story demonstrating the blind spot for Democrats from a staffer who said Hillary Clinton had reached out to various ethnic groups during the 2016 campaign but didn't mention whites or males. "My staffer goes, 'She doesn't want my vote. She didn't ask for my vote.' And he's a white male. She didn't ask for any male," Todd said. "And now you're like, 'Oh, we got a problem.' Well, you spent 15 years essentially ignoring that vote, and in fact, not only ignoring it — interest groups going out of their way to marginalize that demographic group. And then you're shocked when that demographic group doesn't think the Democratic Party wants them to be members." Video of his comments were widely shared on social media. RELATED: Chuck Todd leaves NBC News as shake-up at Dem-friendly media rolls on under Trump Photo by: William B. Plowman/NBC via Getty Images Todd had been previously mocked and ridiculed by many on social media for angrily denying that the mainstream media had missed the story about former President Joe Biden's decline. “This was a failure of the Democratic Party. And ... the virtue signaling that some people have done to try to say that the media missed this story — they didn’t miss this story!" he yelled. "The media’s got plenty of things to attack them for," Todd added. "And there are MSNBC and CNN and pundits that absolutely carried water for Joe Biden. But they’re not journalists! They’re former strategists that carried water for Joe Biden!" Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
7 w

Best Warzone FFAR 1 loadout
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Best Warzone FFAR 1 loadout

What is the best FFAR loadout in Warzone? Out of the box, the FFAR is an assault rifle with an immense rate of fire and enough damage to put enemies down quickly. It can be a little unwieldy, though, and struggles to compete in the mid-range. Our loadout refines that power, putting the FFAR firmly in contention for best assault rifle. With the wide open spaces of Verdansk, you need a weapon that can deal with different types of firefights. All of our best Warzone loadouts are flexible, allowing you to showcase your skills no matter the situation, and with our best Warzone FFAR loadout, we believe we have the perfect sniper support so you can deal with anything that comes your way. Continue reading Best Warzone FFAR 1 loadout MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Warzone loadouts, Best Warzone AR, Best Warzone guns
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