


Ice Cube and Rocky are the only contestants who had no chance to leave the Tiny Loser Chamber after being eliminated before the finale.Firey, Leafy, Bubble, Gelatin, Yellow Face, and Bomby are the only BFDI/A contestants who were never sent to the TLC.The Tiny Loser Chamber does not appear in Battle for BFDI all of the eliminated contestants have escaped, and eliminated contestants are sent to EXIT pre-split and BRB post-split instead.Ĭharacters inside of the TLC as of Welcome Back In " Welcome Back", the characters agree to use a Wall Teleporter to extract the Tiny Loser Chamber's prisoners. It is kept inside the Locker of Losers for extra protection. In Battle for Dream Island Again, the Tiny Loser Chamber is used to contain non-participants.

In " Hurtful!", Firey's replacement box smelts down the contestants, who are metal due to a side effect from the yoyleberries, and fixes the TLC, re-scribbling LOSER onto the middle in red print.

The heat of the Tiny Loser Chamber is the most prominent reason for which the eliminated contestants choose Ice Cube to be eliminated. In " The Glistening", when the Announcer and the contestants ride back to Earth, they go through the Tiny Loser Chamber, ripping through it, changing the words to simply "Tiny Chamber". In " Reveal Novum", the eliminated contestants accidentally send the Tiny Loser Chamber into a lake they are subsequently saved by sunrise. As a result, between the events of " Cycle of Life" and of " Insectophobe's Nightmare", the Tiny Loser Chamber is enlarged. In " Puzzling Mysteries", when Needle is eliminated, the Tiny Loser Chamber becomes too populated to hold any more contestants. It first appears in " Bridge Crossing", wherein Woody is thrown into the Tiny Loser Chamber by the Sender Scoop Thrower. In the first season, the Tiny Loser Chamber is used to contain eliminated contestants. 2 Characters inside of the TLC as of Welcome Back.This season, black plastic tubing can be seen snaking down hundreds of rows of sorghum: an experiment with microdrip irrigation that could radically reduce the farm’s withdrawals from an overtaxed watershed. Although the canals supply enough water to meet CRIT’s farming needs for now, the tribes are planning for a hotter, drier future. A network of canals built in the 19th century delivers water from the Colorado River, a system that seemed like a better idea before the watershed entered a persistent and increasingly dire state of drought. “The reservation is set up on a pretty outdated flood irrigation system,” Moore says. Less than a quarter inch of rain has fallen so far this year, according to Josh Moore, who manages the farm on behalf of his tribe. For anything to grow here, irrigation is a must. On the bone-dry western flank of Arizona, where the Colorado River Basin meets the Mojave Desert, sit 11,000 acres of alfalfa, sorghum, wheat, and Sudan grass belonging to the Colorado River Indian Tribes (CRIT), all destined to be harvested and sold for animal feed.
