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  2. Adventures of Pip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adventures_of_Pip

    In Adventures of Pip, the player plays as Pip, a single pixel born into a world of hi-res and lo-res characters. As Pip defeats his enemies, he gains the ability to evolve into an 8-bit hero and later a 16-bit hero. Each evolution has its advantages and disadvantages. Pip must switch between his evolutions to complete levels.

  3. Flinx's Folly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flinx's_Folly

    Adventures of Pip & Flinx ... The book is the eighth chronologically in the Pip and Flinx series,. ... a quasi-religious group that worships death itself as expressed ...

  4. Bloodhype - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloodhype

    The book is eleventh chronologically in the Pip and Flinx series, though it was written second; the main characters only appear in the last third of the book. In the series, it falls after Orphan Star, where Flinx meets the aliens who build him his ship, the Teacher. The novel takes its title from a deadly and addictive drug, for which there is ...

  5. Mid-Flinx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-Flinx

    When the situation becomes life-threatening, Flinx and his snake, Pip, flee the planet, instructing the space ship to fly into random uncharted space. The ship takes them to a supposedly undiscovered planet, covered with jungle a mile thick. Flinx exits his lander - and is nearly killed by a huge, transparent flying creature.

  6. Flinx Transcendent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flinx_Transcendent

    The book is the fourteenth in the chronology of the Pip and Flinx series. It was published in April 2009. The novel is the final volume in the "Great Evil" story arc, but not the final Humanx Commonwealth novel, or even the final Flinx novel. [1]

  7. Enid Blyton bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enid_Blyton_bibliography

    The Adventures of Pip, illustrator Raymond Sheppard [9] My Enid Blyton Brer Rabbit Book BR1 [10] Come to the Circus!(B) (duplicated title), illustrator Joyce M. Johnson [11] Five Go Off to Camp, illustrator Eileen Soper, Famous Five series 7 [12] Third Holiday Book [13] How Do You Do, Mary Mouse, illustrator Olive Openshaw, Mary Mouse 7 [14]

  8. Great Expectations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Expectations

    Pip represents, as do those he mimics, the bankruptcy of the "idea of the gentleman", and becomes the sole beneficiary of vulgarity, inversely proportional to his mounting gentility. [146] In chapter 30, Dickens parodies the new disease that is corroding Pip's moral values through the character "Trabb's boy", who is the only one not to be fooled.

  9. Grailquest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grailquest

    The rules of GrailQuest are quite simple when compared to current RPGs.The player must roll two six-sided dice and add the results. If the result exceeds 6 (which will happen 58.3% of the time), then the enemy is injured and loses a number of Life Points - how much depends on what the dice shows, as every point over 6 will count as a point of damage.