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  2. World of Warcraft: Dragonflight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../World_of_Warcraft:_Dragonflight

    Dragonflight raised the level cap to 70, the first increase since the level squish in Shadowlands. [4] Dragonflight also features a revamp of the user interface and talent tree systems, [1] [4] with two tree branches. [5] Dragonflight includes a new playable race, the Dracthyr, and a new class, the Evoker. The two are combined: Evokers are ...

  3. Dragonflight (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonflight_(video_game)

    Aktueller Software Markt said Dragonflight is competitive with the Ultima series. [2] Play Time had trouble getting the DOS version to run on a VGA card and when it worked the graphics were poor and the sound annoying. [6] By 1992, Dragonflight had sold 25,000 copies on all platforms, making it the best-selling game by Thalion Software at that ...

  4. Dragonflight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonflight

    Dragonflight may refer to: Dragonflight (novel) , a 1968 science-fiction novel by Anne McCaffrey Dragonflight (convention) , a gaming convention established in 1980

  5. Dragonriders of Pern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonriders_of_Pern

    In 1991, Dragonflight, the first Pern book published, was released as a set of three graphic novels by Eclipse Books of Forestville, California. The story was adapted across all three graphic novels by Brynne Stephens. The first two graphic novels were illustrated by Lela Dowling and Fred Von Tobel, the third by Lela Dowling and Cynthia Martin. [7]

  6. Dragonflight (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonflight_(novel)

    Dragonflight is a science fiction novel by the American-Irish author Anne McCaffrey. It is the first book in the Dragonriders of Pern series. First published by Ballantine Books in July 1968, it was a fix-up of two novellas which between them had made McCaffrey the first woman writer to win a Hugo and a Nebula Award .

  7. Heirloom plant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heirloom_plant

    Only a few of the many varieties of potato are commercially grown; others are heirlooms.. An heirloom plant, heirloom variety, heritage fruit (Australia and New Zealand), or heirloom vegetable (especially in Ireland and the UK) is an old cultivar of a plant used for food that is grown and maintained by gardeners and farmers, particularly in isolated communities of the Western world. [1]

  8. Heirloom tomato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heirloom_tomato

    Organic heirloom tomatoes. An heirloom tomato (also called heritage tomato in the UK) is an open-pollinated, non-hybrid heirloom cultivar of tomato. They are classified as family heirlooms, commercial heirlooms, mystery heirlooms, or created heirlooms. They usually have a shorter shelf life and are less disease resistant than hybrids.

  9. Heirloom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heirloom

    Pusaka is a Sanskrit word meaning heirloom. Within Javanese Kejawen culture and other Austronesian cultures affected by it, known as the Malays, but most specifically the inhabitants of modern-day Indonesia and Malaysia (), Balinese, Bataks, Bugis, Manado, Minang, Moro, Pampangan, Tagalog and many others, pusaka specifically refers to family heirlooms inherited from ancestors, which must be ...