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Source of the Nile is a board game for 1–6 players in which the players take on the roles of 19th-century European explorers in Africa. The object of the game is to organize an expedition to Africa, make an important discovery, return to Europe to publish a report, then organize another expedition.
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We the People is a board wargame about the American Revolution, published by Avalon Hill in 1993 [1] and designed by Mark Herman. We the People was the first wargame to use cards as the primary way to control the pace and tempo of play, with a strong element of fog of war through the hidden card information. This started a new genre of wargames ...
Nile Online (2009), a web game in the same vein as Children of the Nile. [4] Medieval Mayor (development paused, permanent hiatus [5]), a city-building game set in the Middle Ages. It marks a return to a 2D game engine, and will focus on a single player experience only. [6]
Title page Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile by James Bruce, 1790 His Travels was issued in 1790, after he retired to his home at Kinnaird, at the urging of his friend Daines Barrington . It was published in five octavo volumes, lavishly illustrated, but was ridiculed by scholars and other travellers as being exaggerated nonsense.
Burkhart Waldecker (August 19, 1902, in Hagen – 1964) was a German explorer who, in 1937, discovered the most southern source of the White Nile in Burundi. [1] [2] Waldecker came to the area to seek asylum from Nazi persecution. [citation needed] The true source is near Rutovu, where a pyramid was erected in 1938 [citation needed]. Waldecker ...
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Edmond Hoyle (1672 – 29 August 1769) [2] was an English writer best known for his works on the rules and play of card games.The phrase "according to Hoyle" (meaning "strictly according to the rules") came into the language as a reflection of his broadly perceived authority on the subject; [2] use of the phrase has since expanded to any appeal to a putative authority.