enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pokémon Trading Card Game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokémon_Trading_Card_Game

    A Pokémon TCG playmat with labels of various gameplay aspects, e.g. Active Spot, Bench, Deck, and Discard Pile. The Pokémon Trading Card Game is a strategy-based card game that is usually played on a designated playmat or digitally on an official game client where two players (assuming the role of Pokémon Trainer) use their Pokémon to battle one another.

  3. Pokémon fan games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokémon_fan_games

    Game Release date Creator Description Pokémon Apex - Nathan Gunzenhauser [18]: A fan-made Pokémon game designed for adult fans of the series. [19] The game focuses on the player character being sent to another world, where the player must ally with Pokémon to stop a cult from trying to destroy the world. [20]

  4. Talk:Pokémon Brick Bronze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Pokémon_Brick_Bronze

    Talk: Pokémon Brick Bronze. Add languages. ... Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version ...

  5. Nintendo Player's Guide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_Player's_Guide

    Nintendo did also once offer a subscription motive that included four of the aforementioned Player's Guides instead of only one. Following these four Player's Guides, a fifth was released to Nintendo Power subscribers entitled Top Secret Passwords, containing passwords for a wide variety of NES, SNES, and Game Boy games. While initially billed ...

  6. Pokémon (video game series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pokémon_(video_game_series)

    This makes Pokémon the fourth best-selling video game franchise, behind Nintendo's own Mario franchise, Call of Duty, and Tetris. Gameplay Each game in the Pokémon series takes place in a fictional region of the Pokémon world, typically based on a real-world location, and begins with the player receiving a starter Pokémon, usually from that ...

  7. Masonry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masonry

    A mason laying a brick on top of the mortar Bridge over the Isábena river in the Monastery of Santa María de Obarra, masonry construction with stones. Masonry is the craft of building a structure with brick, stone, or similar material, including mortar plastering which are often laid in, bound, and pasted together by mortar.

  8. Mudbrick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mudbrick

    Mudbrick or mud-brick, also known as unfired brick, is an air-dried brick, made of a mixture of mud (containing loam, clay, sand and water) mixed with a binding material such as rice husks or straw. Mudbricks are known from 9000 BCE. From around 5000–4000 BCE, mudbricks evolved into fired bricks to increase strength

  9. Brickwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brickwork

    A "face brick" is a higher-quality brick, designed for use in visible external surfaces in face-work, as opposed to a "filler brick" for internal parts of the wall, or where the surface is to be covered with stucco or a similar coating, or where the filler bricks will be concealed by other bricks (in structures more than two bricks thick).