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From its chaotic mix of languages to its ever-changing temperatures, Montreal is a pretty unique place. But if you're new here, it may seem a little daunting, or just plain old confusing.

Earlier this week, a Reddit user by the name of Tall_Grand6813 asked the Montreal community the following question: "What are some unwritten rules about living in Montreal that everyone here just knows?"

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Choosing your Canadian university is about way more than its ranking or its reputation according to your parents. Where you go says a whole lot about your personality – whether you like it or not.

What the kids opting to take their gap year in their parents' basement don't get these days is that, unless you are trying to become a doctor, university is not about school. It's about experimenting with alcohol and that cute person on your floor at res who you hooked up with at freshers and will avoid for the next four years.

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I've dated across Canada like it's a government-funded research project. Three cities — no apps, no algorithm, no curated bio. Just raw, in-person interaction and whatever personality happened to be seated across from me.

What I discovered is this: dating in Canada is aggressively geographic. From Toronto lawyers to Montreal creatives and Vancouver ski bros — the results of my romantic life have been chaotic yet informative.

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Whether it's due to Quebec's low drinking age or last call at 3 a.m., for many out-of-towners, Montreal is the kind of city you come to for a wild weekend. That reputation is nothing new.

Back in the 1920s, when the United States introduced Prohibition, Americans flocked north to Montreal — dubbed 'Sin City' at the time — to do their drinking and their partying. A century later, the "Red-Light District" at the corner of Saint-Laurent and Sainte-Catherine still stands among the country's top nightlife spots, despite many businesses coming and going.

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François Legault's resignation as Quebec premier on Wednesday morning sent shockwaves across the province.

The 68-year-old leader caught many people off guard by calling a sudden press conference at 11 a.m. After nearly 15 years leading the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ), the party he founded in 2011, Legault officially announced his departure from political life.

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Winter in Montreal can be brutal on your skin. Between the biting cold outside and the dry heat indoors, maintaining that healthy glow feels like a full-time job. If you've been scrolling through endless skincare routines, wondering what actually works, it might be time to level up your approach with medical aesthetics.

Medispa Physimed is where science meets beauty. Unlike at your typical spa day, every treatment is performed under medical supervision by certified, reputable doctors who know exactly what they're doing.

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If you have ever scrolled through a streaming service in Quebec and wondered why The Hangover suddenly goes by Lendemain de veille, or flipped through a DVD rack and spotted La Vengeance dans la peau where The Bourne Ultimatum should be, you have already encountered this province's unique approach to Hollywood movie titles.

It all stems from Quebec's language laws and long-standing cultural policy aimed at protecting French. Movie titles marketed here are expected to be available in French, and Quebec distributors typically opt for fully translated or localized versions.

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In what might be the funnest collab of the year, M&M'S and Crocs have teamed up to bring you a collection that's sweet and super creative.

At first glance, this first-ever collaboration between M&M'S and Crocs might surprise you. But think on it for a second, and it makes a ton of sense. It might even be genius.

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Love it or hate it, Montreal does not move like most other North American cities.

The bone-chilling winters, world-class food scene, and chaotic blending of languages give the place a rhythm that is equal parts lively and charming. A lot of it only starts to make sense once you've spent enough time living here.

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With plenty of aging stations, years of construction, and the occasional service blackout from strikes, Montrealers don't hesitate to point out what's wrong with the STM. A few weeks ago, we asked MTL Blog readers to name the "ugliest" metro stations in the city, and the reactions came in hot.

But the thread also took an unexpected turn. Mixed in with all the criticism were plenty of glass-half-full riders who wanted us to pose the opposite question: which Montreal metro stations are beautiful?

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Winter in Montreal can get rough.

Anyone who's been through Quebec's longest season and lived to tell the tale knows it's not for the weak. The cold bites, the sidewalks turn into obstacle courses, and even the most optimistic Montrealers eventually lose a glove somewhere between the metro and the dépanneur.

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Many Montreal metro stations are admired for their unique art, colour patterns, and architecture. But not every Société de transport de Montréal (STM) entry point is a masterpiece. Some are drab, dark, or downright depressing, at least according to MTL Blog readers.

So when we asked our Facebook followers which Montreal metro station they think is the "ugliest", hundreds of answers came pouring in. From cold concrete designs to stations that feel stuck in the 1970s, people didn't hold back.

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