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PowerWash Simulator is a simulation video game developed by FuturLab and published by Square Enix Collective. Players take control of a power washing business and complete various jobs to earn money. Gameplay primarily revolves around using a power washer to clean dirt off of objects and buildings.
A social deduction game is a game in which players attempt to uncover each other's hidden role or team allegiance. [1] Commonly, these games are played with teams, with one team being considered "good" and another being "bad". [ 2 ]
Robert Hatch is a game designer and writer who developed key role-playing game releases for White Wolf Publishing from 1993 to 2001. He is known primarily for three games he co-created: the science fiction game Trinity , the super-hero game Aberrant (1999), [ 1 ] : 221 and the epic fantasy RPG Exalted (2001).
Robert Hatch (game designer) Robert McConnell Hatch (1910–2009), suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut Robert W. Hatch (1924–2010), American football player and coach
Nancy Drew is invited to Shadow Ranch in Arizona for a vacation. On the first day there, Nancy discovers that the owners of the ranch, Ed and Bet Rawley, are gone. The previous evening, a glowing horse came galloping up to the ranch, causing a huge commotion, and shortly after, Mr. Rawley was bitten by a venomous snake and rushed to the hospital.
Neil Strauss was quoted in a review by Steven Poole in The Guardian as saying, "A side effect of sarging (socializing with the intent of finding and seducing a woman) is that it can lower one's opinion of the opposite sex", though the reviewer noted, "And yet, as he has described it, the inverse is true: a low opinion of the opposite sex is a prerequisite for sarging."
Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe is a World War II air-combat combat flight simulation game first released in August 1991 [1] by Lucasfilm Games. It was the last of a trilogy of World War II titles by Lucasfilm Games , the others being Battlehawks 1942 (1988) and Their Finest Hour (1989).
"Stinkin' badges" is a paraphrase of a line of dialogue from the 1948 film The Treasure of the Sierra Madre. [1] That line was in turn derived from dialogue in the 1927 novel of the same name , which was the basis for the film.