Bazsites.com Circle Of The Moon
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Neoseeker: Castlevania: Circle of the Moon - Offers screenshots, and links to reviews and cheats.
- GameWinners.com: Castlevania: Circle Of The Moon - Includes hints, codes, glitches, and cheats.
- AllRPG.com: Castlevania: Circle of the Moon - Includes screenshots, artwork, coverage, a preview, and a review for this Game Boy Advance RPG.
- GameFAQs: Circle of the Moon - Includes walkthroughs, FAQs, maps, lists, secrets, codes, user reviews, and message board.
- GameSpy - Reviewed by Andrew S. Bub. Includes screen shots. Score: 82 out of 100.
- GameSpot - Reviewed by Jeff Gerstmann. Includes screen shots, reader ratings, cheat codes, glitches, and gameplay movies. Score: 9.6 out of 10.
- eLook - Contains a summary of cheats.
- The Hardcore Gamer's Reference - Game guides, hints, enemy chart, armor and item list, castle map and boss strategy.
Wikipedia Articles
- C Moon - "C Moon" was an early faux ska tune by the band Wings, complete with a missed-cue intro that was kept in the released version. "C Moon", B-side to the single "Hi, Hi, Hi", is meant to represent a circle, or the opposite of "L7", which was the sign for "square" or "unhip".
- Castlevania: Circle of the Moon - |developer = KCEK
- Parhelic circle - A parhelic circle is a halo, an optical phenomenon appearing as a horizontal white line on the same altitude as the sun, or occasionally the Moon. If complete, it stretches all around the sky, but more commonly it only appears in sections.
- Soyuz 7K-L3 - The Soyuz 7K-L3 LOK was designed to launch men from Earth to circle the moon and developed in parallel to the 7K-L1. The LOK -Lunniy Orbitalny Korabl would carry two cosmonauts into orbit around the Moon, acting as "mother" spacecraft for the LK Lander, which would land one member of the crew to the surface.
- Deferent and epicycle - In the Ptolemaic system of astronomy, the epicycle (literally: on the circle in Greek) was a geometric model to explain the variations in speed and direction of the apparent motion of the Moon, Sun, and planets. It was designed by Apollonius of Perga at the end of the 3rd century BC.