http://www.cwhdallas.com/adventure-amiga/
Adventure Amiga
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| AMIGA GAME ARCTIC ADVENTURE | ![]() |
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US $4.73 | 23d 11h 21m |
| Amiga Game - The Faerytale Adventure by Microillusions ۩ | ![]() |
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US $14.22 | 17d 8h 7m |
| THE ADVENTURES OF WILLY BEAMISH HINT BOOK DYANMIX SIERRA PC AMIGA COMMODORE | ![]() |
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US $28.95 | 13d 13h 59m |
| THE ADVENTURES OF WILLY BEAMISH AMIGA GAME SIERRA DNYAMIX COMPLETE + STICKERS | ![]() |
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US $54.99 | 13d 13h 59m |
| King's Quest IV Perils Of Rosella AMIGA adventure game! | ![]() |
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US $19.54 | 9d 17h 56m |
| The Immortal AMIGA isometric action-adventure RPG game! | ![]() |
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US $16.99 | 9d 14h 45m |
| Twilight's Ransom AMIGA kidnapped text adventure game! | ![]() |
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US $15.29 | 9d 14h 5m |
| Altered Destiny AMIGA weird fantasy adventure game! | ![]() |
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US $17.99 | 9d 13h 52m |
| AMIGA GAME - NODDY'S BIG ADVENTURE | ![]() |
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US $9.47 | 9d 10h 53m |
| ☺ Amiga Game - The Adventures of Robin Hood by Kixx XL ☺ | ![]() |
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US $44.26 | 8d 23h 28m |
| Stormlord AMIGA medieval platform adventure fairies fantasy dragons arcade game! | ![]() |
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US $14.44 | 7d 15h 22m |
| Gold Rush! AMIGA animated California prospector action adventure game! FLOPPY | ![]() |
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US $21.99 | 5d 19h 19m |
| Rome AD 92 AMIGA historic strategy Roman adventure game | ![]() |
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US $15.29 | 23h 45m |
| THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD BY MILLENIUM FOR AMIGA-BIG BOX-MINT CON-VERY RARE | ![]() |
0 Bid | US $14.22 | 2d 4h 10m |
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The Adventures of Willy Beamish |
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Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego? |
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The Immortal |
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Osito polar y su nueva amiga, El (S (Spanish Edition) List Price: $6.95 Sale Price: $119.99 |
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Now Lars returns in another delightful story, newly translated into Spanish. This time, while searching for someone to play with, he is caught in a trap and finds himself in a cargo plane full of animals headed for the zoo. Luckily, Lars's cage breaks open when the plane lands, and as he sets the other animals free, he finds the friend he's been seeking all along. Full color. |
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Viene Una Amiga a Jugar (Spanish Edition) List Price: $9.65 Sale Price: $9.65 |
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Amigas para siempre (Spanish Edition) List Price: $18.95 Sale Price: $17.97 |
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A book by and about girlfriends, this write-right-in-it book is full of irresistible friendship activities: funny quizzes, fill-in-the-blanks, doodle how-tos, messages in code, compatibility tests, lists of favorites, and secret identities.The book comes with special envelopes, a spinning perpetual birthday calendar, and 78 plastic stickers in cool shapes and translucent colors. |
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Dungeon Master II: The Legend of Skullkeep Sale Price: $3.00 |
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This software is BRAND NEW. Packaging may differ slightly from the stock photo above. Please click on our logo above to see over 15,000 titles in stock. |
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Amiga Classix 4 Sale Price: $29.99 |
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This software is BRAND NEW. Packaging may differ slightly from the stock photo above. Please click on our logo above to see over 15,000 titles in stock. |
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Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers Sale Price: $28.00 |
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Roger Wilco embarks on a topsy-turvy trip through space and time in this forth chapter in the award-winning Space Quest series, Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers. From a nostalgic look at his past in Space Quest 1 to a terrying visit to the future of Space Quest XII, Roger's on the run again....with all his nonsense, bad jokes, lots of fun games. |
Solo Travel: Two Months in Costa Rica and Nicaragua
I was as nervous as my loved ones were about my solitary exploits as a woman in Central America last summer. Nonetheless, I discovered helpful community everywhere from buses to budget hotels, and even with friends of friends.
After two months of road trips from corner to corner of Costa Rica and around southern Nicaragua, my energy was waning. Just then, on a bus ride, I crossed paths with one of the most inspiring people I'd met in months. After finding 1,000 children living in a garbage dump in Managua, Andres was spearheading orphanages around the world—a shining example of someone living his passion.
Andres was one of many people that smoothed out the challenging moments that came with venturing outside my comfort zones. Being open to creating a new community, even a temporary one, seems essential when traveling—especially alone. It touches your heart in so many ways.
The trip began in tiny Playa Uvita, Costa Rica. I walked along a rainforest road, accompanied by roosters and bugs. I was thrilled to end up solo on a wide beach, wading in wonderfully warm water. Suddenly a meddlesome man I'd met earlier rode his horse right up to me, with dog in tow, like a scene from a movie. When Prince Charming's horse released his bowels in the ocean, my perfect beach moment took a hit as well. I chalked it up to a lesson in tolerance.
Nosara was next, a stormy beach where friends of friends hosted me in their tropical guest house. I continued to discover community in the most unexpected places. What was that pounding on the roof? An iguana! Screeching at 5 a.m.? A jungle bird. Loud scary dog-like sound? Howler monkey. Strange creature on the floor along with the ants and worms? A scorpion!
In Nosara, I met a jovial New Yorker who offered me a ride to Nicaragua. We made our way through rain, road construction, passport stamping on both sides of the border, and changing money from colones to cordobas. Then came the task of finding the least decrepit and safest budget hotel once arriving in charming San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua.
I felt comforted by my growing travelers' community when I took a spontaneous jaunt with another Californian to Isla de Ometepe, a peaceful island with petroglyphs, cows and pigs walking freely in the roads, and adorable children smiling from their patios. On the way to the island, I asked the taxi driver to slow down since I didn't want to die—especially on my birthday. Next, we took a sweltering ferry ride to Ometepe, where the taxi driver was amusingly island-paced, stopping in the middle of the road to chat with friends on foot. He suggested we eat bull testicles with chili and lemon to feel strong. Settled into a hotel, we swam in a lake along with pop-up sardines and a view of two volcanoes. As I later stood by a tree, a cow chomped on avocadoes and a squirrel dropped a mango on my shoulder.
My fellow adventurer woke me at 4 a.m. to ask me to turn on the light; he was spooked by the sound of an animal on his upper bunk bed. As happens sometimes in Latin America, the electricity was out, so he wondered if the noise was a monkey munching on some food. I found this unsolved mystery hilarious.
Worn out from so many two-day trips, the bronchitis that I'd had in San Diego was back, so I stayed several days in beautiful colonial Granada, Nicaragua. The doctor who helped me recover couldn´t fathom how at 38, I had no kids and was traveling alone. Eleven years ago, my ex-husband had guided me through four months in South America and it was one of the most meaningful experiences I'd ever had. Now I am so grateful that I followed my dreams, as I found out it wasn't too late to take the solo trip I'd fantasized about at age 20.
For safety, I hired a guide to accompany me to a lake and an historic outdoor market outside Granada. The usual child vendors, working to help their needy families, climbed aboard the bus. A few girls selling plaintain chips and candies asked, "Is everyone in the U.S. white?" I explained that I had friends who were African-American, Asian, Mexican, and so on. As we chatted, one girl sadly asked if I could adopt her as her parents had died, and she disliked living with her grandmother.
San Jose, Costa Rica may be run-down, but I kept returning to the city as it's a hub for buses throughout the country. Through family friends, I met Raquel and Federico, whose home was respite from the noise and cigarette smoke typical of budget hotels. We shared lovely meals and became fast friends, touring a volcano and lush hilly smalltowns.
Next came the malfunctioning foot portion of the trip. The scene: a hostel with the typical array of 20-something North Americans, Italians, and Israelis vying for the Internet. Ironically trying to avoid a construction zone, I rammed into something in that disheveled area too difficult to see in the dark. Thinking it was a bad toe stubbing, I socialized for a few hours until I discovered my foot was bleeding and cut.
I relocated to Casa Ridgway, the San Jose hostel where I most felt a sense of community among interesting activist travelers. A delightful Australian living in Hong Kong burned incense in our room, and then flew off to Cuba. A 16-year-old drilled me about the goods and bads of solo travel, plotting her future. I befriended a humanitarian videographer, and a group of young breakdancers from Nicaragua and Guatemala. Unable to walk, I'd call on whoever was passing by to bring water, beans or avocados from the market.
Then Raquel's amiga rescued me. Marielos picked me up, cleaned up the pitiful foot, and with help from a doctor friend, started me on antibiotics. Within a few hours, we were like sisters, watching a dubbed Ben Stiller movie on her bed. I lived with her family for a week until I was back on my feet again.
It was time to return to California. I decided I wasn't going to become yet another U.S. expat in Costa Rica. I'd heard of too many tourist robberies, found the mosquitoes and humidity irritating, and as a vegan, was longing for more variety than gallo pinto (smashed rice and beans). While I'd enjoyed the lush beaches, tropical creatures and made dear friends, those nights when I was scared for my safety sleeping alone made me long for the comfort of San Diego and friends there.
It was indeed a life-changing trip. Not only did I find community in all corners of the world but also cultivated a profound inner strength for having conquered deeply-rooted fears about traveling alone.
About the Author
Central America Forum is a community resource for old hands (locals and foreigners) and recent arrivals to share information about living in and visiting the countries of Central America: Guatemala, Belize, Living in Nicaragua, El Salvador, Living in Costa Rica and Panama.
Where can I download free old PC games?
I'm not after any of the new games but the old school point and click adventure games and the like that you used to get on the PC/Amiga e.g. Monkey Island, Indiana Jones, Sherlock Holmes etc.
Thanks!
You still have to pay for most/all of them. I don't know about Sherlock Holmes, but neither Monkey Island nor any of the Indiana Jones games have descended into abandonware or freeware so there's no reason not to fork out the money for them if you want them badly enough.
App Store Games of the Week: 04/11 - 04/17
It's a well-documented fact that hundreds of apps and games hit the iTunes App Store each week, but how many of these pocket-sized endeavors are worth your hard earned cash? Each week, we pick out the best (or simply the most notable) of the bunch for our App Store Games of the Week.
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