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Terraria (/ t ə ˈ r ɛər i ə / ⓘ tə-RAIR-ee-ə [1]) is a 2011 action-adventure sandbox game developed by Re-Logic. The game was first released for Windows and has since been ported to other PC and console platforms.
In video games using procedural world generation, the map seed is a (relatively) short number or text string which is used to procedurally create the game world ("map"). "). This means that while the seed-unique generated map may be many megabytes in size (often generated incrementally and virtually unlimited in potential size), it is possible to reset to the unmodified map, or the unmodified ...
Bad Seed Bad Seed January 23, 2020 [45] [46] Sleep Tight: We Are Fuzzy We Are Fuzzy July 26, 2018 [219] Slender: The Arrival: Blue Isle Studios Blue Isle Studios June 20, 2019 Slime-san: Fabraz Headup Games August 3, 2017 [220] Slime Tactics: Altair Works Flyhigh Works April 11, 2019 [221] Sling Ming: Good Night Brave Warrior Good Night Brave ...
Hive is a bug-themed tabletop abstract strategy game, designed by John Yianni [2] and published in 2001 by Gen42 Games. The object of Hive is to capture the opponent's queen bee by having it completely surrounded by other pieces (belonging to either player), while avoiding the capture of one's own queen. [3]
This is a list of Xbox One games currently planned or released either at retail or via download. [a] See ACA Neo Geo and Arcade Game Series for a list of emulated arcade games that have been released for the Xbox One, and List of Xbox 360 & Xbox games for Xbox one for Xbox 360 & Xbox running on Xbox One with an emulator.
Plants in this genus are commonly known as horse-eye beans or simply ormosias, and in Spanish by the somewhat ambiguous term "chocho". The scientific name Ormosia is a nomen conservandum , overruling Toulichiba which is formally rejected under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants .
Leurotrigona muelleri, commonly known as the lambe-olhos bee (Brazilian Portuguese: "eye-licking bee"), is a species of small eusocial stingless bee in the family Apidae and tribe Meliponini. [ 1 ] References
The word mucuna is the vernacular name for Mucuna urens in an indigenous language of Brazil, and in 1763 this word was chosen by the French botanist Michel Adanson in his Familles naturelles des plantes to be the generic epithet for this genus of legumes, [3] [4] although M. urens was itself known as Dolichos urens until being transferred to Mucuna many years later.