enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Virtual Villagers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_Villagers

    Virtual Villagers is a series of village simulator video games created and developed by Last Day of Work, an independent video game developer and publisher. Each game contains puzzles the player must complete to uncover the ethnic and cultural backgrounds surrounding fictional Polynesian island called Isola (EE-zoh-la).

  3. Resident Evil 4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resident_Evil_4

    The Wii Edition also includes the extra content from the PS2 and PC versions, and a trailer for Resident Evil: The Umbrella Chronicles. [72] The Wii Edition became available for download from the Wii U's Nintendo eShop in Europe on October 29, 2015. [81] [82] Resident Evil 4: Mobile Edition was released in Japan for au's BREW 4

  4. Villager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villager

    The Villager (Austin, Texas), a free weekly newspaper of Austin, Texas, serving the African-American community; The Villager, a weekly newspaper in Namibia; The Villager (Saint Paul, Minnesota), a community newspaper in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States; The Villager, a newspaper in Manhattan, New York, United States

  5. The Villagers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Villagers

    Gi-cheol, a former boxing champion, is appointed as a PE teacher at an all girls' high school in a small village, where a student named Han Soo-Yeon had recently gone missing. The girl's disappearance is largely a mystery, but Gi-cheol gets a strange feeling about the town after his arrival as all the villagers seem uptight and highly agitated.

  6. Village idiot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Village_idiot

    The village idiot was long considered an acceptable social role, a unique individual who was dependent yet contributed to the social fabric of their community. [3] As early as Byzantine times, the "village idiot" was treated as an acceptable form of disabled individual compatible with then-prevailing normative conceptions of social order.