Loot in a sentence as a noun

And noone complains about the random loot anymore.

Diablo 2 could be just as frustrating if loot you needed didn't drop in time.

The more people who joined in the looting, the thinner the police were stretched, and the safer it was to join in.

All this attributes to one single fact, this government only wants to loot from the country.

Make the rod a bit shorter, if you have to hand out parcels after an invasion, and you have a good loot left for yourself.

Today, it's unlikely that some Mongol horde is going to loot my supermarket, so I drink milk and eat cheese because they are really tasty.

Diablo 2 uses a traditional variable reward schedule for its loot system, as seen in most other RPGs.

You need gold to get the items the game requires you to have from the AH, and you're mostly burning the loot you find in-game for gold on the AH or other mats.

Loot in a sentence as a verb

Well, there he has $5 million in "stolen" loot, in a compact package with a comparable weight to value ratio as giant diamonds.

The team that had devised the scheme actually disclosed it to the game devs but the policy on loopholes was clear: even if you disclose, you don't get to keep the loot.

The righties note that the Obama administration rewrote bankruptcy law on the fly to loot value from GM stockholders and hand it to the unions.

There are NPC spaceships that you can **** for loot, but that sort of thing is small potatoes--there's no equivalent to a 40 man raid grouping up for a boss fight to get good loot.

A nice side effect is that you don't have to think about loot separately when designing the content, because it comes naturally from the design of the mob.

I am wary of rewarding the brain with in-game loot for memorizing the rules of algebra rather than with the deep satisfaction that comes with understanding.

When theres a revolution and a mass of people loot, throw out, ****, etc. existing power-holders, it quite clearly indicates a problem with the previous set of laws in the society, no matter how vehemently those elites protest.

Loot definitions

noun

goods or money obtained illegally

See also: booty pillage plunder prize swag

noun

informal terms for money

See also: boodle bread cabbage clams dinero dough gelt kale lettuce lolly lucre moolah

verb

take illegally; of intellectual property; "This writer plundered from famous authors"

See also: plunder

verb

steal goods; take as spoils; "During the earthquake people looted the stores that were deserted by their owners"

See also: plunder despoil reave strip rifle ransack pillage foray