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  2. Home Entertainment Suppliers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Entertainment_Suppliers

    HES seal to mimic the Nintendo Seal of Quality.. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, HES ported games from American Game Cartridges, American Video Entertainment (AVE), Bit Corp, Color Dreams, Epyx, Thin Chen Enterprise (Sachen, Joy Van, etc.) and Tengen onto the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) as unlicensed titles, although they did not release games by Camerica or Active Enterprises.

  3. EB Games Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EB_Games_Australia

    Electronics Boutique Australia Pty Ltd, trading as EB Games Australia, is an Australian video game, consumer electronics, and gaming merchandise retailer. EB Games mainly sells video games, consoles, and accessories for Nintendo , PC , PlayStation and Xbox systems as well as merchandise related to pop culture/gaming.

  4. Famiclone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famiclone

    There are also a number of famiclones in the shape of a Game Boy or similar, but which can only display NES/Famicom games on a TV, and have a simple LCD game in the screen area. such an example is the NES Clone "GameKids Advance", which resembles an older Game Boy Advance, and has a built-in LCD game, powered by 2 AA batteries, or the included ...

  5. Pheasants Nest, New South Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pheasants_Nest,_New_South...

    The area was inhabited by the Dharawal and Gundungurra peoples for tens of thousands of years. [2]White settlers first recorded sightings of the koala, lyrebird, and wombat in the area, with ex-convict John Wilson describing the lyrebird as a peasant, and this is the mostly likely origin of the name.

  6. Common pheasant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_pheasant

    Southern Caucasian pheasants (P. c. colchicus) were common in Greece during the classical period and it is a widespread myth that the Greeks took pheasants to the Balkans when they colonised Colchis in the Caucasus. This colonization happened during the 6th century BC, but pheasant archaeological remains in the Balkans are much older dating to ...

  7. Mikado pheasant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikado_pheasant

    Mikado pheasants build their nests mainly with dead branches, fallen leaves, dry grass and feathers in tree holes or depressions under rocks. Females usually lay three to eight creamy-colored eggs at one time and it is they who are solely responsible for the incubation of the eggs (which take about 26–28 days to hatch) and the nurture of ...

  8. List of birds of Namibia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Namibia

    The Phasianidae are a family of terrestrial birds which consists of quails, partridges, snowcocks, francolins, spurfowls, tragopans, monals, pheasants, peafowls, and jungle fowls. In general, they are plump (although they vary in size) and have broad, relatively short wings. Crested francolin, Ortygornis sephaena; Coqui francolin, Campocolinus ...

  9. Pheasant coucal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pheasant_coucal

    50 to 70 cm (20 to 28 in) in length, the pheasant coucal is a large heavy-set bird adapted for living on the ground, reminiscent of a pheasant in shape. Birds in breeding plumage have black heads, necks, breasts and bellies, barred chestnut wings and long black, brown and cream barred tails.