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BattleTech 3025 (Later 3026)* 1991-Volunteers: MUSE BattleTech 3056* 1993-Volunteers: MUSE BattleTech 3030* 1994-Volunteers: MUSE (Later incarnation changed to TinyMUX code after the success of the spinoff game Varxsis) BattleTech: The Frontier Lands* Inner Sphere 3028* MUX: Invasion3042* 2006-2014: Volunteers: Windows MechWarrior: Living ...
BattleTech Tactical Handbook is an 80-page softcover book written by Jim Long and Stuart Johnson containing advanced rules and additional equipment for BattleTech. [1]The first part of the book offers
The .350 Legend, also called 350 LGND (9×43mmRB), is a SAAMI-standardized [2] straight-walled intermediate rifle cartridge developed by Winchester Repeating Arms. The cartridge was designed for use in American states that have specific regulations for deer hunting with straight-walled centerfire cartridges.
MechWarrior 3050, also known as BattleTech in its original Sega Genesis release and in Japan as BattleTech 3050 (バトルテック3050), is a 1994 mech-based video game developed by Malibu. The first BattleTech based game to be released for the Sega Genesis , it was later ported to the Super Nintendo by Activision as MechWarrior 3050 .
The CAB GY-30 Supercab was a two-seat light aircraft built in France in 1954, as a further development of the CAB Minicab. The design was performed by Yves Gardan, a onetime employee of French aeronautical company SIPA .
The Beechcraft Super King Air 350 airplane. Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination.
Bauckholt was fatally shot after she pulled out a firearm, according to an FBI affidavit. (Bauckholt, who transitioned to female after college, is referred to in court documents by her birth name ...
Red Planet was the first non-BattleTech game added, and involved racing through the mining tunnels of Mars using vectored thrust mining hover-crafts. However, rapid advances in arcade games and online games meant that the Japanese Centers began closing in 1995, and by 2000 no BattleTech Centers remained operational in Japan.