Article: Even in small worlds, finding one village amidst tens of thousands of blocks is a bit like finding a needle in a haystack. Villages spawn in Desert, Savanna, Taiga (including cold variants of Taiga), and Plains (including icy plains) biomes. If you find yourself in a Jungle, Mushroom, Tundra, or other biome not supported for villages, don't waste your time looking. Villages are often made of wood planks and cobblestone, and tend to stand out from their surrounding areas. It can take hours to find a village, so stock up on basic tools, a bed, food, and weapons before you set out. It's best to travel during the day and camp during the nights, so consider digging yourself a hold and sealing it most of the way to keep out mobs. You'll need to leave at least one block open to avoid suffocating. If you happen to have a saddle, you can use it to get a mount and speed up your exploration. Find a horse and interact with it several times with an empty hand until it doesn't throw you off, then sneak up to the tamed horse and select it with the saddle to make it controllable while you ride it. Navigate to the tallest hill that you can find in a biome in which villages spawn. This will allow you to take in the surrounding areas, making it easier to spot man-made structures. You'll be able to see fire much more clearly at night than during the day. While fire at night may be lava, there's a good chance that the fire is coming from torches—and torches typically mean villages. Be extremely careful while doing this if you're playing survival mode on anything other than "peaceful" difficulty. It's best not to investigate the torches until the following day due to mobs. Villages are random, and there is no sure-fire way to find one in the game without using third-party tools. For the best chance at finding a village, take the time to explore each compatible biome you come across.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Understand that finding a village may take hours. Know where to look. Know what to look for. Prepare for a long journey. Tame a mount for transportation. Find a viewpoint. Look for torches at night. Keep exploring.

Problem: Article: Everyone knows exercise is good for your body, but it’s also good for your skin.  Working out tones and firms your muscles, which helps the skin look better.  On top of that, exercise aids in circulation which feeds skin cells with oxygen and nutrients, it dilates the skin, and reduces inflammation.  There are multiple ways exercise makes you look refreshed.  Clean your skin before you work out to help keep your pores unclogged. Keep your skin cooler and cleaner by wearing moisture-wicking clothing to get the perspiration away from your skin.  This also helps prevent acne.  Exercise in a cool environment that helps keep your body temperature down.  This can help prevent flare-ups of some skin conditions.  Apply a skin moisturizer.  Using skin moisturizer before exercise helps repel sweat, and applying afterwards – especially after swimming – helps fight dry, cracked skin and unhealthy appearance.  Exercise reduces stress and anxiety.  Feel happy about your condition, your confidence, and your fitness.  Even just 15 minutes of exercise can reduce anxiety levels. Studies have shown that alternating hot and cold treatment, even including a sauna, has great benefits.  Blood flow is increased, the metabolism speeds up, depression is minimized, and the body is stimulated.  After you're cleaned up, alternate between the coldest temperature you can tolerate, then the hottest, and finish with the coldest again. Smoking has been related through studies to a variety of skin aging issues as well as skin conditions like psoriasis.  The heat from the cigarette directly affects the skin, and the elasticity is worsened because the blood vessels are constricted.  On top of that, levels of vitamin A are reduced. Eat meals healthy for your body, those high in fiber with minimal fats, especially saturated fat.  These diets boost energy and mood, while poorer diets make you drowsy and miserable.  Choose foods with folic acid and Vitamin B12, like leafy green vegetables and beans, to reduce symptoms of depression.   Eat plenty of fruits.  Some studies have linked eating fruit to better physical health, and better feelings about personal health.  Eat fish often.  Multiple studies have linked eating plenty of seafood to lower levels of depression.  Try to fit fish with high levels of omega-3 fatty acids into your daily diet. Drink about 3 liters (0.8 US gal) of water per day.  Drinking plenty of water has been shown to increase blood flow and elasticity of the skin, making it appear thicker, moister, and healthier.
Summary: Exercise! Incorporate morning hydrotherapy. Quit smoking. Change your diet. Drink enough water.

The following games all support bot additions via console commands:  Counter-Strike: Global Offensive Counter-Strike: Source Counter-Strike 1.6 This process will vary slightly depending on your selected game:   Counter-Strike: Global Offensive — Click OPTIONS at the top of the home page, click GAME SETTINGS in the drop-down menu, and switch the "Enable Developer Console" option to "Yes".  Counter-Strike: Source and Counter-Strike 1.6 — Click Options, click the Keyboard tab, click Advanced..., and check the "Enable developer console" box. Either create a new online game, or open your server and connect to it before proceeding. Doing so will bring up the developer window on the right side of the Counter-Strike screen. The ~ (tilde) key is typically found below the Esc key in the top-left corner of the keyboard. Type in bot_add_ct and press ↵ Enter to add a bot to the "Counter-Terrorists" team, or type in bot_add_t and press ↵ Enter to add a bot to the "Terrorists" team. Open the console by pressing ~, then enter in bot_difficulty 1 for easy bots, bot_difficulty 2 for medium bots, or bot_difficulty 3 for expert bots.
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One-sentence summary --
Open a Counter-Strike game. Enable the developer console. Start a game. Press the ~ key. Add a bot. Change a bot's difficulty.