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2011 video game Dragon Age II downloadable content Developer(s) BioWare Publisher(s) Electronic Arts Composer(s) Inon Zur Series Dragon Age Engine Lycium Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, OS X Release The Exiled Prince March 8, 2011 The Black Emporium March 8, 2011 All-Class Item Pack April 4, 2011 Legacy July 26, 2011 All-Class Item Pack II August 23, 2011 Mark of the ...
A Minecraft mod is a mod that changes aspects of the sandbox game Minecraft. Minecraft mods can add additional content to the game, make tweaks to specific features, and optimize performance. Thousands of mods for the game have been created, with some mods even generating an income for their authors.
Dragon Age II is a 2011 action role-playing video game developed by BioWare and published by Electronic Arts (EA). It is the second major game in the Dragon Age series and the successor to Dragon Age: Origins (2009).
Adventures in Blackmoor (module DA1) is a 64-page [1] adventure with cover art by Jeff Easley and interior artwork by Jim Holloway. [2] It features some locations and characters from Dave Arneson's original Blackmoor campaign. Temple of the Frog (module DA2, ISBN 0-88038-317-8) is a 48-page adventure published in 1986 with TSR product code "TSR ...
Wyvern is a free game that is influenced by games such as Crossfire and NetHack. [4] Wyvern is designed to be available on many platforms through a pure Java version. Once users download the game client, they select a character from a collection of fantasy races. Users navigate through the game through a mixture of tapping and text-based commands.
A cockatrice is a mythical beast, essentially a two-legged dragon, wyvern, or serpent-like creature with a rooster's head. Described by Laurence Breiner as "an ornament in the drama and poetry of the Elizabethans ", it was featured prominently in English thought and myth for centuries.
An amalgam of these techniques is Project Honey Pot, a distributed, open-source project that uses honeypot pages installed on websites around the world. These honeypot pages disseminate uniquely tagged spamtrap email addresses and spammers can then be tracked—the corresponding spam mail is subsequently sent to these spamtrap e-mail addresses.
In 2005, a member of 419eater.com posed as an aid worker at a refugee camp on the Chad/Sudan border in order to bait a trio of Nigerian 419 scammers. He convinced the scammers to travel to the camp to receive $145,000 in person, which would require them to travel through a war zone as well as a region experiencing an active genocide.