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Paper size standards govern the size of sheets of paper used as writing paper, stationery, cards, and for some printed documents. The ISO 216 standard, which includes the commonly used A4 size, is the international standard for paper size.
B5 Championships, a 2001 fighting game tournament %B5, the percent-encoding for the letter μ; B5, a paper size of the B series defined in ISO 216; B5, a category of stellar classification; Bensen B-5, a small rotor kite; Border Five
The Babylon 5 Collectible Card Game (B5 CCG) is an out-of-print collectible card game set in the Babylon 5 universe. [1] It was published from 1997 to 2000. [2] The game is ideally set for 4-5 players but can be played with a minimum of two players up to as many as 20 if using multiple Non-Aligned Factions and Home Factions.
Since its initial release in 2004, A Call to Arms has gone through several significant changes, with the release of supporting material and supplements. Initially the main boxed set contained the basic rules set and fleet lists for the Earth Alliance, Minbari, Centauri, Narn, Interstellar Alliance, Shadows, Vorlons, Raiders and League of Non-Aligned Worlds, as well as cardboard counters that ...
The Babylon 5 Roleplaying Game was published by Mongoose Publishing in 2003. A second edition of the core rules was published in 2006 using the WotC Open Game License. [2] In 2008 Mongoose published Universe of Babylon 5, a set of rules allowing the game to use Mongoose's edition of Traveller as its RPG engine instead of the d20 System.
Chameleon (2005 video game) Champions: Return to Arms; Championship Manager 5; Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005 video game) Chibi-Robo! (video game) Chicken Little (video game) Chłopaki Nie Płaczą (video game) The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (video game) Chuzzle; Civilization IV; Classified: The Sentinel ...
Game Developer Setting Platform Notes 1964: The Sumerian Game: Mabel Addis: Historical: MAIN: Text-based game based on the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash. [1] 1969: The Sumer Game: Richard Merrill: Historical: MAIN: Adaptation of The Sumerian Game. [1] 1975: Hamurabi: David H. Ahl: Historical: MAIN: Expanded version of The Sumer Game.
Diplomacy is a turn-based strategy video game based on Avalon Hill's board game of the same name, developed by Paradox Development Studio and published by Paradox Interactive for Microsoft Windows in 2005.