Country Dictionary

A fork of Rural Dictionary

CAST

(noun): co-op arena strategy The genre of gaming invented by Eul and developed by Guinsoo, Neichus, Syllable and eventually Icefrog. Previously known by the useless term MOBA made popular by Riot Games. Veteran professional players who have become analysts of the game are known as 'casters'. Two teams of 5 players each control 1 (or sometimes more) character called a hero. Heroes fight to level up by killing minions that spawn from the enemy side of the map along paths called lanes, gaining experience and gold from kills. Experience allows heroes to learn and improve their special abilities. Gold is used to buy powerful items to either attack, debuff or control enemies or to help and support teammates (and allies). These individual objectives all come together to achieve one team objective: DEFEND THE TEAM'S ANCIENT / NEXUS AND DESTROY THAT OF THE ENEMY! Usually, tiered special structures or entities stand in the way of this major objective and must be eliminated one after another down any particular lane to achieve success. Popular CAST games include: Dota 2, developed by Valve League of Legends, developed by Riot Games Smite, developed by Hi-Rez Studios Heroes of Newerth, developed by S2 Games Heroes of the Storm, developed by Blizzard Entertainment The CAST game with the highest professional competitive prize pool is Dota 2 with 'The International', at $40 million (USD) at the time of writing. This prize pool is formed from purchases by a devoted community.

rAGEBLADE: Guys, I'm bored with this game. Sturm&Drang: We could play that CAST game, League of Legends? rAGEBLADE: CAST? lol wth is League of Legends? Raijin: It's dead-easy, m8, you'll love it. It's like an arcade game but stupider. Or Dota 2 if that's too easy. Techsmith314: CAST is a co-op game where you level up and strat before you spam your supers. rAGEBLADE: Just show me what this CAST stuff is.

by Kekkoen July 12, 2021

Casting

When someone is acting extremely sus. Especially when referring to cheating, soft begging, emotional manipulation, and an overall lack of empathy.

"Bro, please stop casting." "I can't stand Brittany, she's such a caster."

by LilacLilyUWU September 11, 2023

Casted

To snitch on a fam Present tense : Cast

My mom casted me to my dad bruv I’ll have to cast you man

by Mandem energy October 18, 2019

casted

Not a word. The correct word is "cast".

"As a young wizard, I frequently casted my spells onto unsuspecting Muggles." "It's cast, not casted."

by Jameson R. Cui November 01, 2010

Cast

A cum sock that has dried out and hardened like a a cast.

Dude is that a cast on your floor?

by D_COPE April 22, 2010

caste

An centuries-old but effective economic/cultural system of control in which a person who is born in a certain class is forced to live out his/her entire life in that class. Still being used by India. What the modern Capitalism-based American economic system really is, since the citizens of the Middle, Lower, and Poverty classes are forced to spend their entire lives working for less and less money, while being tricked by the Upper and Wealthy classes into believing that their dreams will come true if they work hard enough.

In India, the Untouchables are the lowest of its traditional caste system.

by sarcastic March 29, 2004

caste

A Portuguese colonial interpretation of ancient Indian grouping by hereditary profession, called "jāti" in Hindoostani; predating the Aryan penetration of the subcontinent, but believed by White Nationalists (among others) to be a kind of primitive apartheid system introduced by the Vedic Aryans to keep those of darker skin away from them, due to conflation with the five *classes*, properly "varna", of Vedic society (Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaisya, Sudra, Chandal).

"Castes are systems of occupation, endogamy, social culture, social class, and political power, the assignment of individuals to places in the social hierarchy is determined by social group and cultural heritage. Although India is often now associated with the word "caste", it was first used by the Portuguese to describe inherited class status in their own European society."

by Marshal Lentini May 21, 2009