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Learn about the history and solution of a classic puzzle invented by Sam Loyd in 1858, featuring two donkeys and two riders. The puzzle involves cutting out and reassembling three pieces of paper to create an illusion of movement.
The following is a listing of commercially released books from Pinnacle Entertainment Group and licensees for the Savage Worlds role-playing and miniatures game.This does not include various free downloads.
A comprehensive list of novels featuring Mack Bolan, a fictional character created by Don Pendleton in 1969. The list covers the regular Executioner series, the Super Bolan series, and the spin-off series by other authors.
An adventure game is a video game genre in which the player assumes the role of a protagonist in an interactive story, driven by exploration and/or puzzle-solving. [1] The genre's focus on story allows it to draw heavily from other narrative-based media, such as literature and film, encompassing a wide variety of genres.
Dead Frontier: Active 3D: Horror: Freemium: 2008: Pay for extras, Browser-based Defiance: Closed 3D: Post-apocalyptic: Free-to-play: 2013: 2021 Tie-in to the Syfy show of the same name: Digimon Battle Online: South Korea 3D: Fantasy: Freemium: 2002: 2013 (West) Western servers closed in 2013, still running in South Korea. Digimon Masters ...
Cain's Jawbone is a 100-page prose narrative with its pages arranged in the wrong order, written by Edward Powys Mathers under the pseudonym "Torquemada". The puzzle consists of a murder mystery with quotations, references, puns and word games, and has only been solved by four people since 1934.
The Lost Fleet is a military science fiction series written by John G. Hemry under the pen name Jack Campbell. The series is set one-hundred-plus years into an interstellar war between two different human cultures, the Alliance and the Syndicate.
An American-style crossword grid layout. A crossword (or crossword puzzle) is a word game consisting of a grid of black and white squares, into which solvers enter words or phrases ("entries") crossing each other horizontally ("across") and vertically ("down") according to a set of clues.