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In the Footsteps of Darwin: Correspondence
England, 1856: Charles Darwin finishes writing On the Origin of Species while you are on your way home. Your correspondence with the illustrious scientist during your journey has paid off as his book will soon be published - but you\'re not done yet. In the In the Footsteps of Darwin: Correspondence expansion, you will gain the support of historical figures and make fascinating new discoveries thanks to several new features for the base game: publication tokens, classification tokens, envelope tokens, and new characters such as Emma Darwin and Queen Victoria.
Trek 12+1
Open the first page now and discover the adventure that awaits you!
This extension is based on the contents of a travel diary discovered during your stay at the Temple of Machapuchare. This diary has been lost by Max, a famous mountaineer, in an ascent during which he lost some of his equipment. You come across this finely illustrated notebook and you decide to relive Max\'s adventure!
You will go back in time following his footsteps, you will live a personal experience punctuated by encounters... Will the increasing difficulty of this new expedition make you give up?
Zombie Teenz Evolution
Zombie Teenz Evolution is a co-operative game: all players win (or lose!) together against the zombies. To win, you must bring the four ingredient crates to the school before the zombies overrun the four buildings in the town.
Zombie Kidz Evolution
Zombies are wreaking havoc! Can you find the antidote before it is too late? Packed full with missions and mystery envelopes, Zombie Teenz Evolution will evolve and change right before your eyes.
Outfoxed!
Mrs. Plumpert’s prized pot pie has gone missing and it’s now a chicken chase to crack the case!
In the Footsteps of Darwin
Twenty years after his expedition around the world, Charles Darwin is writing On the Origins of Species. He wants to gather new information about animal life, particularly about continents he hardly explored. Who other than young naturalists, eager for discovery, could help the renowned scholar finish writing his most famous work?