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Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions is a turn-based tactical role-playing game. [6] Set within the fictional world of Ivalice, the game follows a war between the Kingdom of Ivalice and its neighbor Ordalia, told as a historical document relating the deeds of an extensive cast drawn from both sides of the conflict.
Final Fantasy Tactics [a] is a 1997 tactical role-playing game developed and published by Square for the PlayStation.It was released in Japan in June 1997 and in North America in January 1998 by Sony Computer Entertainment, it is the first game of the Tactics sub-series within the Final Fantasy franchise, and the first entry set in the fictional world later known as Ivalice.
Of adult male lions that were tagged inside the park, 72% were killed through sport hunting on areas near the park. [19] During 2013, 49 hunted lion carcasses were exported from Zimbabwe as trophies; [6] the 2005–2008 Zimbabwe hunt "off-take" (licensed kills) average was 42 lions per year. [22]
These magnificent big cats face dangers from climate change, habitat loss, and poaching. October 25, 2025 – National Pitbull Awareness Day , celebrated on the last Saturday of October, provides ...
A group of poachers were bested by a pride of lions after they broke into a South African game reserve in a bid to stalk and slaughter a herd of rhinos.
Arriving in Africa in 1896, and after hunting man-eating lions for the Uganda Railway and then serving in the Boer War, from 1902 Bell hunted elephant in Kenya, Uganda, Abyssinia, Sudan, the Lado Enclave (one of the few to do so there legally), French Ivory Coast, Liberia, French Congo, and the Belgian Congo. During his hunting career, Bell ...
Researchers captured a record-breaking swim by two male lions through crocodile-infested waters as the big cats sought mates and new territory. ... including losing part of a leg to a poaching ...
A cease-fire agreement ended the civil war in 1992 but widespread hunting in the park continued for at least two more years. [3] [13] By that time many large mammal populations—including elephants, hippos, buffalo, zebras, and lions had been reduced by more than 95 percent.