Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
White Cat Project was released in Japan on July 14, 2014 on iOS and Android platforms. The theme song for the game is titled "Stand Up!", performed by Yui Horie. [9] An international English version operated from July 23, 2015 until its closure on October 7, 2016. In January 2015, Colopl released a VR version of White Cat Project for the Oculus ...
Yo Frankie!, Sintel The Game, ColorCube: GPL-2.0-or-later: 2D/3D game engine packaged in a 3D modelar with integrated Bullet physics library [2] [3] Build engine: C: 1995 Yes 2.5D Windows, Linux, macOS, DOS: Duke Nukem 3D, Shadow Warrior, Blood, Redneck Rampage: Custom, free non-commercial use FPS engine; 2.5D, 2D grid base geometry Buildbox ...
Columns (video game) 1990: Comet Busters! 1991: HAMCO Software, Xtreme Games LLC: Comic Book Confidential: 1994: The Voyager Company: The Complete MAUS: 1995: The Voyager Company: Connections: 1995: Discovery Channel Multimedia: Conway's Game of Life: 1993: Dave Crawford Core War: 1994: Stage Research Cow V: The Great Egg Quest! 1992: J ...
A Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) playing dead A barred grass snake (Natrix helvetica) playing dead. Apparent death [a] is a behavior in which animals take on the appearance of being dead.
The species is grey-bronze dorsally and white ventrally. [6] As its name suggests, most of its fins (dorsal, pectoral, pelvic and caudal) have white tips. Along with white tips, the fins may be mottled, and young specimens can have black marks. A saddle-like patch may be apparent between first and second dorsal fins. The shark has two kinds of ...
Nitama is a medium-hair calico cat and is easily distinguished from both Tama and Yontama in pictures by her coat length. She is often drawn as endearingly fluffy on promotional materials. After Tama's enshrinement in August 2015, Nitama was taken to the shrine to pay her respects and then formally installed as the new stationmaster.
Felis badia was the scientific name proposed by John Edward Gray in 1874, who first described a bay cat skin and skull collected by Alfred Russel Wallace in 1856 in Sarawak. This cat was first thought to be a kitten of an Asian golden cat. [3] In 1932, Reginald Innes Pocock placed the species in the monotypic genus Badiofelis. [4]
The margay is very similar to the larger ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) in appearance, although the head is a little shorter, the eyes larger, and the tail and legs longer.It weighs from 2.6 to 4 kg (5.7 to 8.8 lb), with a body length of 48 to 79 cm (19 to 31 in) and a tail length of 33 to 51 cm (13 to 20 in).