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Shaman King: Legacy of the Spirits is a role-playing video game—the first Shaman King game on the genre. [1] The player controls Yoh Asakura, a young shaman who has the ability to communicate with spirits and along with the samurai spirit Amidamaru will battle other shamans to become the Shaman King. [2]
Arsène Lupin III is out to steal a pair of antique pitchers which will supposedly show the way to the legendary treasure of King Randolph II. The mysterious Theodore Hannewald is planning to display them at an exhibition at his ancestral castle in Goldengasse (a European city heavily inspired by Prague), and hires Inspector Koichi Zenigata of Interpol (ICPO in the Japanese version) to protect ...
Khun Poom Jensen [Note 1] (Thai: พุ่ม เจนเซน; RTGS: Phum; Thai pronunciation:; 16 August 1983 – 26 December 2004), born Bhumi Jensen (also spelled Poomi Jensen, [1] [2] [3] Thai: ภูมิ เจนเซน; RTGS: Phumi; Thai pronunciation:), was a grandson of King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand, after whom he was named.
Martin Luther King III has carried the weight of his father's legacy since he was born. And now, with a new book, he's hoping to impart the lessons he's learned along the way. Together with his ...
King's Quest III was the biggest and most ambitious game Sierra had made up to that point. The series's designer and writer Roberta Williams said: "My previous games, from Mystery House to King's Quest II, were all great. But they were essentially glorified treasure hunts... your object being to win the game by finding and collecting items.
Phillipps recorded in an early catalogue that his collection was instigated by reading various accounts of the destruction of valuable manuscripts. [3] Such was his devotion that he acquired some 40,000 printed books and 60,000 manuscripts, arguably the largest collection a single individual has created, and coined the term "vello-maniac" [ 4 ...
Sakura is commonly stated to have been a former slave of the royal court, but it is not clear if he was literally enslaved. Ibn Khaldun refers to him by the term mawlā (Arabic: مولى), which can be translated as "client", and may imply that he was formerly enslaved but was freed by the Keitas.
Ciarán was born in around 516 in County Roscommon, Connacht, in Ireland. [3] His father was a carpenter and chariot maker. [8] As a boy, Ciarán worked as a cattle herder. [9] He was a student of Finian's at Clonard and in time became a teacher, himself. [3] Columba of Iona said of Ciarán, "He was a lamp, blazing with the light of wisdom."