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A simple hydra game can be defined as follows: A hydra is a finite rooted tree, which is a connected graph with no cycles and a specific node designated as the root of the tree. In a rooted tree, each node has a single parent (with the exception of the root, which has no parent) and a set of children, as opposed to an unrooted tree where there ...
Buchholz's paper in 1987 showed that the canonical correspondence between a hydra and an infinitary well-founded tree (or the corresponding term in the notation system associated to Buchholz's function, which does not necessarily belong to the ordinal notation system ), preserves fundamental sequences of choosing the rightmost leaves and the operation on an infinitary well-founded tree or the ...
The Hydra game implemented as a Java applet; Javascript implementation of a variant of the Hydra game; Goodstein Sequences: The Power of a Detour via Infinity - good exposition with illustrations of Goodstein Sequences and the hydra game. Goodstein Calculator Archived 2017-02-04 at the Wayback Machine
Carrion is a horror video game developed by Phobia Game Studio and published by Devolver Digital.Described as a "reverse-horror game", [1] [2] [3] the game allows players to control a tentacled monster whose objective is to make its way through a facility, stalking and killing humans in its path.
Consentacle is a science fiction cooperative board game about negotiating consensual sex between two femme characters: a human astronaut and a tentacled alien. It was designed by Naomi Clark and illustrated by James Harvey. [1] [2] Consentacle was published in 2018 after a successful Kickstarter campaign raised $154,609. [3]
The second edition of the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game featured both a higher number of books of monsters [4] – "many tied to their growing stable of campaign worlds" [5]: 221 - and more extensive monster descriptions than both earlier [1] and later editions, with usually one page in length.
It has a circular body shape and about 240 tentacles. Its most distinctive feature is its bright red, “cross-shaped” stomach. Photos show the St. George’s cross medusa jellyfish in an aquarium.
Like other hydras, Hydra vulgaris cling to a base object with a "foot" pad, shaped like a disk. The Hydra moves by releasing its grip on its base and is carried away by the current. H. vulgaris can also move by bending over, grabbing a surface with its tentacles, releasing its grip with its "foot" and flipping over itself.