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Kingdom Two Crowns is a 2018 strategy video game developed by Thomas van den Berg and Coatsink and published by Raw Fury.It is the third entry in the Kingdom series. Players control a mounted monarch as they attempt to defend their kingdom from a race of monsters called the Greed.
The giant hermit crab [1] (Petrochirus diogenes) is a species of marine hermit crab. This species lives in the Caribbean Sea, and often inhabits conch shells. [2] This species of hermit crab is large enough that it can inhabit a fully grown shell of the queen conch. It will attack and eat a conch, thus obtaining a meal and a shell. [3]
Calcinus laurentae is a species of left-handed hermit crab in the family Diogenidae. [1] The common name for Calcinus laurentae is Laurent's Hermit Crab [ 2 ] or Redleg calcinus. [ 3 ] Calcinus laurentae are native to Hawaii [ 4 ] and the Hawaiian word for hermit crab is unauna.
"Kingdom Two Crowns features single-player and cooperative multiplayer," => "Kingdom Two Crowns features single-player and cooperative multiplayer modes," "Players control a mounted monarch who must build their kingdom, and defend it from monsters called the Greed" - no need for comma in the middle there
The developers originally designed Kingdom Two Crowns as an expansion pack for Kingdom: New Lands (2016). As the expansion grew, they decided to release it as a separate game. Kingdom Two Crowns was released for Windows, macOS, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, and Xbox One on December 11, 2018, and for iOS and Android on April 28, 2020.
It is one of only two species of hermit crab (the other being the closely related C. verrilli) in which sexual dimorphism in shell use has been observed. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Males inhabit gastropod shells , chiefly those of Pisania maculosa or Cerithium vulgatum , [ 5 ] which they can move freely; females occupy the fixed tubes made by the vermetid ...
Aniculus hopperae, also known as reticulated Hawaiian hermit, is a species of hermit crab in the family Diogenidae from the Pacific Ocean. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The specific name hopperae honors Carol N. Hopper from Waikīkī Aquarium .
They are able to venture far inland, in altitudes exceeding 800 m (2,600 ft). In spite of this, the ovigerous females must release the fertilized eggs in the ocean for the larvae to develop (as with all known species of terrestrial hermit crabs). [3] The species is presumably named for the dark red coloration of their exoskeleton.