When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Loot box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loot_box

    Mock-up image of opening a loot box in a video game. In video game terminology, a loot box (also called a loot crate or prize crate) is a consumable virtual item which can be redeemed to receive a randomised selection of further virtual items, or loot, ranging from simple customisation options for a player's avatar or character to game-changing equipment such as weapons and armour.

  3. Gacha game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gacha_game

    A gacha game (Japanese: ガチャ ゲーム, Hepburn: gacha gēmu) is a game, typically a video game, that implements the gachapon machine style mechanics. Similar to loot boxes , Live Service gacha games entice players to spend in-game currency to receive a random in-game item .

  4. List of gacha games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_gacha_games

    Gacha games are video games that implement the gashapon mechanic. Gashapon is a type of a Japanese vending machine in which people insert a coin to acquire a random toy capsule. In gacha games, players pay virtual currency (bought with real money or acquired in-game) to acquire random game characters or pieces of equipment of varying rarity and ...

  5. reCAPTCHA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReCAPTCHA

    In 2013, reCAPTCHA began implementing behavioral analysis of the browser's interactions to predict whether the user was a human or a bot. The following year, Google began to deploy a new reCAPTCHA API, featuring the "no CAPTCHA reCAPTCHA"—where users deemed to be of low risk only need to click a single checkbox to verify their identity.

  6. Botfly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botfly

    The word "bot" in this sense means a maggot. [4] A warble is a skin lump or callus such as might be caused by an ill-fitting harness, or by the presence of a warble fly maggot under the skin. The human botfly, Dermatobia hominis , is the only species of botfly whose larvae ordinarily parasitise humans, though flies in some other families ...