 The RX-7 was one of the heavy engines, the torque engines. RX-7, we used to, our family used to have an RX-7 at some point back in the 90s, late 80s, 90s, and those are, there were fun cars, man. The 86 RX-7, 87 RX-7s, man, what a car. I would love to own one of those cars again, and nice and powerful for what it was. And a heavy front, very heavy front, and that heavy front and the car being low saved my life and my mom's life one day. We were driving down the highway, I was going around 130 clicks an hour or something like this, if you know, be a British Columbia Hope, and it was during sunset, and during sunset and sunrise, deer move, animals tend to move, and going about 130 on a straight highway, saw a deer over here, did a little look over there. When you see a deer, if you're driving, be careful. Deer do not travel alone, right? If you see one deer, there are other deers there. This is like a herd thing, right? So I looked over there, and as soon as I looked in front of me, there was a full grown deer right in front of us, and 130 clicks an hour, boom, nailed it. The deer hit the front side of the car. Lucky for us, it was an RX-7 that we were driving, not RX, yeah, RX-7. At the time, we had a CRX as well. If we had hit that deer at that speed with a Honda CRX, car would have been crushed. Cheecho would probably not be here, right? Nor Cheecho's mom, right? So that deer would have taken me and my mom out with an RX-7, with a CRX, Honda CRX. Because we were driving an RX-7, it's a heavy car, heavy front. The deer, we hit it, the deer flew up, the top of the deer hit the top of the car. Lucky for us, the RX-7 was low, otherwise it would have gone through the windshield. And the deer flew and we skidded. I was somehow was able to keep control, I was a young kid, right? So I guess my reflexes were pretty good. I was still able to keep control. We didn't flip, we didn't roll over, we didn't do, we didn't go down an embankment. There was an embankment right beside us, right? And I stopped the car and did a little double take, got out, and I saw the deer sort of trying to get up. And he had flown, he had flown like down the embankment, it was trying to get up. I was like, oh man, I hit a deer. So, and we were on a road trip, we were going from Vancouver to Toronto. And this is the first day, first couple of hours, we hit a deer, damn. So, got in the car, you checked the car and the car was dent in the front, you couldn't open up the hood, there's hair in the hood and stuff like this. Couldn't open it, we realized that we can't continue the road trip, we have to go get the car fixed. It didn't look that bad, but it was bad. So, the car was still driving, luckily. Took the exit, came back, by the time we went back, that way the deer was already dead. Like, he was done. It was a full blown deer. And found the cop station close by, reported the case and drove back. And the next day, the car got towed to the mechanics to get fixed, and we hopped in the RX-7 and drove across the next day. So, we didn't wait for the car to get fixed. That's my deer killing story.