User:Teamtoto/Sandbox

Barathrum the Old

Come closer, nestling. Let me look upon your countenance.

[1] You are so... old.
[2] Otho said you wished to speak with me. Only available if Pax Klanq, I Presume? is not accepted yet.
[3] What's with the houseplant over there?
[4] Please tell me about the signal again. Only available if Pax Klanq, I Presume? is in progress or is finished.
[5] I convinced Pax Klanq to construct the climber. Available only if the player has convinced Klanq to build the climber.
[6] Pax Klanq has agreed to build the climber. What now? Available after Pax Klanq, I Presume? is complete.
[7] Could you tell me again about the Tomb of the Eaters?
[8] The magnetic field has been disable and the Spindle is free to ascend. What now? Available only after completing Tomb of the Eaters.
[9] Tell me again of the plan to mold a giant creature to ascend the Spindle. Available only after completing Tomb of the Eaters.
[10] The creature has been made. What now? Available only after completing Tomb of the Eaters.
[11] Tell me again how the giant creature functions. Available only after completing Tomb of the Eaters.
[12] Live and drink, eldest Barathrum. [End]
Boops Boops

In the fourth century BCE, Boops boops was documented by Aristotle as box (Greek βῶξ) in his Historia Animalium.[3] In the early third century CE, Athenaeus, in his Deipnosophistae, also called the fish box and suggested that the name came from the sound that the fish makes (Greek βοή, "roar"). [6] The name boops (Greek βόωψ, "ox-eyed") is mentioned due to the fish's large eyes.[4][5] The first scientific description comes from Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of Systema Naturae as Sparus boops. It was later reclassified under the genus Boops.
Perfect
Boops Boops

In the fourth century BCE, Boops boops was documented by Aristotle as box (Greek βῶξ) in his Historia Animalium.[3] In the early third century CE, Athenaeus, in his Deipnosophistae, also called the fish box and suggested that the name came from the sound that the fish makes (Greek βοή, "roar"). [6] The name boops (Greek βόωψ, "ox-eyed") is mentioned due to the fish's large eyes.[4][5] The first scientific description comes from Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of Systema Naturae as Sparus boops. It was later reclassified under the genus Boops.

Swimming in the pool of lava [2000] seems fun. Do you want to have a good time?