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American here. What is this stuff? Is it intended to be consumed in a particular fashion, not just gulped down in a glass?
73 0 ReplyIt’s mostly consumed as an act of bravado in Scotland and the north of England, with the intention of getting riotously drunk.
72 0 ReplySounds like Jager bomb in a convenient twist-off bottle
45 0 ReplyThis is an apt comparison, especially since Buckfast is also caffeinated
32 0 Reply
It appears it's kind of like MD 20/20 here in America. Cheap, sugary "bum" wine.
I just read they also add caffeine to it. Jesus.
33 0 ReplyOh gods, mixing madd dog with four loko sounds horrible.
20 0 Replyoriginal four loko had caffiene in it and was insane
10 0 Reply
And Northern Ireland. Folks here love a bit (a lot) of bucky.
3 0 Reply
The buckfast motto tells you everything you need to know.
Buckfast gets you fucked fast.
It's intended to be consumed in a park directly from the bottle.
An ungodly fortified tonic wine brewed by people of god. Brewed could even be a strong word, if I had to guess, I would say it's extracted from a natural reserve which was originally thought to be oil until they realised it gets you shitfaced.
68 1 ReplyIt's fortified wine with caffeine and is associated with people getting drunk and causing trouble
45 0 ReplyBucky has one purpose. It's the thoroughbred of not-spirits.
Best served warm and straight from the bottle to the back of the throat.
28 0 Reply5 0 ReplyBreakfast.
3 0 ReplyVictorian era four loko, the ingestion technique is more generally forced down.
3 0 Reply