y Peter M. Fitzpatrick and an afterword by Bill McGuinness. I enjoyed this very much. Some of the ways were very specific (going over Niagra Falls in a barrel) and some were pretty vague (lions, tigers, and bears, all in one entry). The level of specificity was good; I always want more detail and more science, but this was enough to temporarily satisfy, if not to fully sate. This is why I love collecting for DD#s 600-620: I now know the poison from a puffer fish can counteract the poison from a poison dart frog.
Neighborhood Games, (for Wii) by THQ. This has a lot of different backyard-type games, like horseshoes, football, and super soakers. The kids enjoyed it. I think the people and all the graphics were kind of cartoon-y. I picked it because it was one of the few 4-player games I could lay hands on this week. It served its purpose, but I wouldn't pick it again.
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Thursday, February 18, 2010
*sigh*
y Peter M. Fitzpatrick and an afterword by Bill McGuinness. I enjoyed this very much. Some of the ways were very specific (going over Niagra Falls in a barrel) and some were pretty vague (lions, tigers, and bears, all in one entry). The level of specificity was good; I always want more detail and more science, but this was enough to temporarily satisfy, if not to fully sate. This is why I love collecting for DD#s 600-620: I now know the poison from a puffer fish can counteract the poison from a poison dart frog.
Neighborhood Games, (for Wii) by THQ. This has a lot of different backyard-type games, like horseshoes, football, and super soakers. The kids enjoyed it. I think the people and all the graphics were kind of cartoon-y. I picked it because it was one of the few 4-player games I could lay hands on this week. It served its purpose, but I wouldn't pick it again.
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