Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wowhead is a website that provides a searchable database, internet forum, guides and player character services for the popular massively multiplayer online role-playing game World of Warcraft. It is owned and operated by ZAM Network LLC ( doing business as Fanbyte), [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] a subsidiary of the Chinese company Tencent .
The original Thottbot was a news aggregator created by Bill "Aftathott" Dyess, founder of the EverQuest guild "Afterlife", in March 2001. Its purpose was to comb various video game websites for news and information on a number of MMORPGs with a focus on EverQuest, and later grew to include other games such as PlanetSide, Meridian 59, Dark Age of Camelot, and World of Warcraft. [4]
A sky lantern (traditional Chinese: 天燈; simplified Chinese: 天灯; pinyin: tiāndēng), also known as Kǒngmíng lantern (traditional Chinese: 孔明燈; simplified Chinese: 孔明灯), or Chinese lantern, is a small balloon made of paper, with an opening at the bottom where a small fire is suspended.
After murdering High Overlord Saurfang using otherworldly powers (at the end of Battle for Azeroth), Sylvanas Windrunner travels to Icecrown Citadel and destroys the Lich King's Helm of Domination, tearing a rift in the sky above Icecrown leading to the Shadowlands, realm of the dead. [19]
Front exterior of Alpha Beta Grocery Store, Laguna Hills, California, 1966, a few beige vintage cars are parked in the parking lot in the foreground, a blue sky in the background Alpha Beta
Susuke Chōchin (煤け提灯, lit. "stained paper lantern") Told in the legends of Niigata Prefecture, on rainy nights it would fly airily around a place where bodies are washed for burial. [18] Nobi (野火, lit. "field fire") A legend from Nagaoka District, Tosa Province (now Kōchi Prefecture), nobi appears in a variety of locations.
A landlord in Queens is so fed up with his sky-high gas heating bills from Con Ed that he’s switching to dirtier home heating oil to warm one of his buildings. Residential-building owner John ...
The U.S. Army helicopter that collided with an passenger jet near Washington, D.C., had an advanced surveillance system turned off.