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Fate/strange Fake is a Japanese light novel series in Type-Moon's Fate franchise, written by Ryōgo Narita and illustrated by Morii Shizuki. [1]It was originally placed on Narita's homepage under the title of "Fake/states night" on April 1, 2008, presented as a prologue and introduction for a role playing style game as an April Fool's prank.
The novel and its plot were the inspiration for the popular Assassin's Creed series of video games. [3] Many elements of the book's plot can be found in the first game, and the phrase from the novel under an alternative translation: "nothing is true; everything is permitted" is the guiding principle of the game's Assassin Brotherhood—who are the descendants of the Ismaili Hashashin.
The game was released in March 2011. A port of the game, called Rift Mobile, was released for Android on January 25, 2012. Rift received generally positive reviews from game critics. In August 2011, Trion announced that 1 million users/players have played the game [1] and by January 2012 it had earned $100 million in total revenue. [2]
Quinton Byfield scored his second goal of the game with 1:41 remaining in overtime as the Los Angeles Kings beat the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 on Saturday. Byfield scored on a wrist shot from the right ...
Syrian leader Bashar Assad issued what appeared to be his first public statement since he was ousted and fled with his family to Russia more than a week ago.
In his commentaries to the tale, Daum recognized that the story was an "adaptation" of the tale of Hassan of Basra, albeit with a "local [Yemeni] colour". [72] In a tale collected from a Yemeni American source with the title Hassan and the Swan Woman of the Island of the Djinn, in a village in Yemen, old Haroun has a young friend named Hassan ...
While that 215,000 figure in 2026 is only 5.3% of all vehicles coming off leases in the US, it will be significantly higher than the approximate 1.5% projected for 2024 and 2025. More supply ...
The Moroccan army lost about a thousand men, [2] while 3,000 Riffian rebels were killed [1] and 8,420 were captured. [3] After the end of the uprising, the Rif was subjected to military rule for several years. This, along with the diversion of much of the region's arable land for cannabis planting, has decimated the local economy and environment.