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Core Keeper is a top-down sandbox game based around survival and crafting mechanics similar to games such as Minecraft and Terraria. [3] It can be played single-player or cooperatively with up to eight players. [3] [4] Players also have the ability to host a server which anyone can join at any time up to a maximum of eight players.
1–3: 1-5607-6139-3: Endless Armies: Jeff Grubb: 1991 ― 32: FMA2: 4–6: 1-5607-6146-6: City of Gold: John Nephew, Jonathan Tweet: 1992 ― 210: FMQ1: 4–6: 1-5607-6322-1: FRA—Forgotten Realms Adventure, or the Empires Adventures Trilogy, is a series of modules for use with The Horde expansion campaign for 2nd Ed. AD&D Forgotten Realms ...
The term walk-through was used to describe step-by-step video game solutions as early as 1984 in the game guide compilation Conquering Adventure Games; [4] this usage of the term was established by 1988 [5] [6] and popularized with the publication of Quest for Clues, [7] a collection of guides for adventure games and role-playing video games ...
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4–7: David Cook: 1980 A2 9040: Secret of the Slavers Stockade: 4–7: Harold Johnson Tom Moldvay: 1981 A3 9041: Assault on the Aerie of the Slave Lords: 4–7: Allen Hammack: 1981 A4 9042: In the Dungeons of the Slave Lords: 4–7: Lawrence Schick: 1981 A1–4 9167: Scourge of the Slave Lords: 7–11: Various: 1986: Revised Compilation ...
Dungeon Keeper is a strategy video game developed by Bullfrog Productions and released by Electronic Arts in June 1997 for MS-DOS and Windows 95. In Dungeon Keeper, the player builds and manages a dungeon, protecting it from invading 'hero' characters intent on stealing accumulated treasures, killing monsters and ultimately the player's demise.
A miko (), or shrine maiden, [1] [2] is a young priestess [3] who works at a Shinto shrine. Miko were once likely seen as shamans, [4] but are understood in modern Japanese culture to be an institutionalized [5] role in daily life, trained to perform tasks, ranging from sacred cleansing [4] to performing the sacred Kagura dance.
Episode # refers to the air date order. The Time Team Specials are aired in between regular episodes, but are omitted from this list. Regular contributors on Time Team include: Tony Robinson (presenter); archaeologists Mick Aston, Phil Harding, Helen Geake, Francis Pryor, Brigid Gallagher, Jackie McKinley, Raksha Dave, Matt Williams, Faye Simpson; Guy de la Bedoyere (Roman historian); Victor ...