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Battle for Dream Island (BFDI) is an animated web series on YouTube created by Chinese-American twin brothers Cary Huang and Michael Huang. As the series has over 1.9 billion total views, [a] you may be surprised that Wikipedia does not have an article for this series.
In August 2011, Destructoid posted an article that speculated that a sequel, Epic Mickey 2, was in development and showed possible box art for the game. [3] These rumors were further encouraged when Disney France and Warren Spector invited the French media to an "epic project" taking place on March 27, 2012.
After the last of the toy line was released in December 2004, the fictional toy world eventually encompassed over 200 different figures and characters from the series, 40 interactive playsets (toy re-creations of Simpsons interior settings and town location settings within Springfield), and three non-interactive diorama town settings.
[3] Epic Battle Fantasy 3 - released on September 1, 2010, on Steam and two weeks later, on September 12, on Newgrounds. [4] [5] Epic Battle Fantasy 4 - released on February 24, 2013 on Steam and on March 10 the same year on Newgrounds. [6] [7] The game was also included in the "Overwhelmingly Positive" Humble Bundle released in January 2017 ...
Love Letter is a card game introduced in May 2012 and designed by Seiji Kanai. [1] Its first English-language edition was produced in the United States by Alderac Entertainment Group (AEG) until 2018, when Love Letter was acquired by Z-Man Games (a subsidiary of Asmodee).
The line of toys was created by David Gonzales [1] and based on a comic strip that Gonzales created [2] featuring a cast of characters from his youth. [3] Introduced in the year 1998, Homies were initially sold in grocery store vending machines and have become a highly collectible item, and have spawned many imitation toys.
U.B. Funkeys is a toys-to-life personal computer game and collectible figure set created by Mattel. It was created in 2007 until discontinuation of the toys in the United States in 2010. Play consisted of a personal computer game that worked together with collectible figures that represent characters in the game.
Monster in My Pocket was best known as a toy-line released by Matchbox in 1990. It consists of small, soft plastic figures representing monsters, and later other tangentially related characters. In its first run, there were 11 series released. There were over 200 monsters in the collection, most of which were assigned a point value.