Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Welcome to the Jewel Quest Mysteries: The Oracle of Ur walkthrough on Gamezebo. Jewel Quest Mysteries: The Oracle of Ur is a Hidden Object/Match-3 game played on the PC created by iWin Games.
A video game walkthrough is a guide aimed towards improving a player's skill within a particular video game and often designed to assist players in completing either an entire video game or specific elements. Walkthroughs may alternatively be set up as a playthrough, where players record themselves playing through a game and upload or live ...
"The Story of Jewel Land's Worst Pet Who Multiplied Her Magic by 40 in 10 Minutes and Restored the Jewel Castle / Jewel Castle, Magical Training Camp from Hell!" Transliteration: " Juerurandobiri no petto ga 10-bu de mahō reberu o 40 agete jueru-jō o gen ni modoshita hanashi / Jueru-jō, jigoku no mahō gasshuku!
Near the half of the season, Dian, another Jewelpet who can use Dark Magic awakens from his Jewel Charm State. And now the heroes have to face him and the havoc and chaos that will be caused in both Jewel Land and the Human World. The series' music is composed by Shiro Hamaguchi. The opening theme is "Really? Seriously! Magical Jewel" (マジ ...
Headmaster Moldavie orders another one of his dangerous mail order items, with three stopping hiccups. When all of those items were used, Akari and her friends had to run away from a monster until Labra and Peridot came and stop it, curing her hiccups. In the end, Labra won the all-year free ice cream at the strawberry café.
Jewel Quest is a tile-matching puzzle video game created and published by iWin. First released for Windows, it has been redeveloped for Symbian S60, the Nintendo DS (as Jewel Quest: Expeditions), the Xbox 360's Xbox Live Arcade and other platforms. iWin also released a series of sequels and spin-off games.
Jewels of the Oracle was the biggest commercial success published by Discis. However, by August 1996, it had nevertheless underperformed compared to forecasts. The company's John Lowry anticipated lifetime sales of 250,000 units, but, according to Anita Elash of Maclean's, "The game was popular, but sales stalled at 80,000 when Discis ran out of marketing money."
A book describing Blanchard's infamous theft, Stealing Sisi's Star: How a Master Thief Nearly Got Away with Austria's Most Famous Jewel by journalist Jennifer Bowers Bahney was released 21 May 2015. [11] It details the life of Empress Elisabeth of Austria and the history of the Star. [12] [13]