Bazsites.com Silmarils
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Adventureland: Silmarils - Short company information and a detailed list of the adventures they have published.
- Silmaril Consultants - SGML and XML systems; Automated typesetting; Web site analysis; Textual therapy. Republic of Ireland.
- Silmaril - A 41 foot sailing yacht specializing in daysails from Peter Island or Tortola for a couple or small families. Includes rates and contact details.
- pedsim - A Modular, Distributed Pedestrian Crowd Simulation System.
- eXtensible Markup Language FAQ - A comprehensive FAQ maintained by Peter Flynn, part of the W3C's XML special interest group.
- Il tempio di Athos - Offre materiale per giochi di ruolo, Silmaril, D
- I, Monster - Work in progress scripted in Python. Source files.
- The Mathom House.com - Dedicated to Tolkien. Links to other sites relating to Tolkien, Middle-earth, the LoTR movies and books.
Wikipedia Articles
- Silmarils (company) - Silmarils is a French computer game software company named after the Silmarils of J. R.
- Asghan: The Dragon Slayer - Asghan: The Dragon Slayer is a fantasy-themed hack-and-slash action role-playing computer game developed by Silmarils and released in December of 1998. Players take on the persona of Asghan, a warrior prince who swears to avenge the death of his father by dragons.
- Metal Mutant - Metal Mutant is a side-scrolling Action-adventure game developed and published for PCs by Silmarils and released in 1991. It is similar to Sierra's Thexder in that it allows you to transform at any time into three different robot forms, each with its own weapons, which include torpedoes, axes, and a remote-controlled flying robot.
- Ishar (series) - Ishar was a series of three role-playing computer games by Silmarils for the Amiga, Atari and Macintosh platforms. The first part is a sequel to Crystals of Arborea.
- Transarctica - Transarctica (or Arctic Baron) is a 1993 computer game made by the French company Silmarils for the Amiga and ported to at least the PC, Macintosh and Atari. Its translation to English was rather haphazard.