It's the Lightning Bolt card from MtG.
Good ol' Lightning Bolt. The most iconic red MtG card ever.
The rules (please read!):
14:
Specifically, what's this?
Does the "this" refer to just the skeleton?
=)
The rules (please read!):
14:
Specifically, what's this?
1. It's not just the skeleton - the whole scene's something very specific.
Game over scene for the original Fallout
(I still need to play that for myself, it's one of those games that I've seen most of over my brothers' shoulders.)
I love those games (and I've played through 'em far, far too much, probably). =)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Upbu3K1cwnI&NR=1&feature=endscreen
The rules (please read!):
15:
What's this, exactly (it's the same place in both images, but from different angles at different times of the day)?
.
That would be Uluru, aka Ayers Rock.
Point for Ringo_ate_my_baby:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uluru_rock
I just stumbled across it while searching for supposedly cursed places.
The rules (please read!):
16:
What's this character's name?
.
That's Aquaman's 5th-dimensional pal Qwsp.
Yep. =)
http://dc.wikia.com/wiki/Qwsp_%28New_Earth%29
The rules (please read!):
17:
Specifically, what's this?
Is it a type of clock?
=)
The rules (please read!):
17:
Specifically, what's this?
1. It is a clock (it's used to measure time).
Bonus update. :b
The rules (please read!):
17:
Specifically, what's this?
1. It is a clock (it's used to measure time).
2. It was invented in the mid-1800s.
Was it designed to operate on its own? (As opposed to being part of a larger device)
.
Is it used to measure more than just time?
:b
The rules (please read!):
17:
Specifically, what's this?
1. It is a clock (it's used to measure time).
2. It was invented in the mid-1800s.
3. It's not part of a larger device.
4. It is just used to measure time, but it's been used to measure the times of different things through history.
Is this a one of a kind item?
Added a new pic, per Sentinel's last question. =)
The rules (please read!):
17:
Specifically, what's this?
1. It is a clock (it's used to measure time).
2. It was invented in the mid-1800s.
3. It's not part of a larger device.
4. It is just used to measure time, but it's been used to measure the times of different things through history.
5. It's not a unique item (the pics above are among the more common ones I found online).
Were these invented in the United States?
-Rob
Is it a chronoscope used for measuring very short intervals of time accurate to 1/1000 th of a second?
If this was The Price Is Right, someone would post and ask "Is it a chronoscope used for measuring very short intervals of time accurate to 1/100th of a second?"
Does this mean I win a chronoscope?
I about blew a gasket googling images and I find the exact picture of the item and excitedly click it to find that it lead back to this page.
I wonder how much one of those would cost (probably a small fortune). :b
http://www.msichicago.org/whats-here/exhibits/science-storms/the-exhibit...
The rules (please read!):
18:
Specifically, what's this?
The propellor and um back spinny thingy from a vintage Gobots Cop-tur.
.
The back spinny thingy is called a tail rotor.
Why haven't Gobots ever been reissued? :/
http://www.toyarchive.com/Gobots/Regular/Coptur.html
The rules (please read!):
19:
Specifically, what's this?
Jack Ruby's gun. (I have no idea how I knew that.)
Yep, that's the very 38 Colt Cobra revolver (SN 2744 LW) that Jack Ruby used to gun down Lee Harvey Oswald. =)
The rules (please read!):
20:
Specifically, what's this?
The chest insignia of the Greatest American Hero.
Yep. =)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greatest_American_Hero
The rules (please read!):
21:
Specifically, what's this character's name?
Is he a DC character?
That's Ogre who reappeared mid way through the Thunderbolts original run before any of the various revamps.
Yep, that's the Ogre, from the Silver Age X-Men and later Thunderbolts. =)
http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/ogrefactor3.htm
The rules (please read!):
22:
Specifically, what's this?
.
It's the Willamette Meteorite.
Yep. =)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willamette_Meteorite
The rules (please read!):
23:
Specifically, what's this?
This'll be the last update 'til after Thanksgiving. Everybody have a good week. =)
Vintage Tundercats Ben-Gali's Hammer of Thundera.
Yep. =)
http://www.toyarchive.com/Thundercats/Figures/BenGali.html
The rules (please read!):
24:
Specifically, what's this?