Wednesday, April 11, 2012

THE MAZE 3D (Flash Version)

Unity laberinto.swf







We just release this flash version in case you have problems instaling the Unity Plugin
Enjoy!


Controles : WASD y Mouse


Get Adobe Flash player

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

THE MAZE 3D (Unity Version)

This is our little tribute to the most awesome screamer maze/game, now in 3d!! We call it "THE MAZE 3D".


Controles : WASD y Mouse




(you should install the Unity Plugin in order to play it)

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

GeekBalls

A new game almost ready for Google Play and Android Market, his name is GeekBalls. We hope you enjoy our puzzle game, it have a 3d look with 2d characters, a very funny gang of balls who need to crash their square shape nemesis.


This game will be available very soon in a full 12 level version. Neverless if you want to try it you can find the demo version for free on the Market/GooglePlay.


Thursday, November 24, 2011

The Ouija Board For Android



We recently release on the Android Market / Google Play a new Ouija Board. We fell this as a big sucess because it is our first esoteric game, you can find it on the market following this link.

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.SpookyGames.NewOuija&feature=search_result#?t=W251bGwsMSwxLDEsImNvbS5TcG9va3lHYW1lcy5OZXdPdWlqYSJd

A little bit about espiritism

Allan Kardec is the pen name of the French teacher and educator Hippolyte Léon Denizard Rivail (Lyon, October 3, 1804 – Paris, March 31, 1869). He is known today as the systematizer of Spiritism for which he laid the foundation with the five books of the Spiritist Codification.



Rivail was born in Lyon in 1804. He was a disciple and collaborator of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, and a teacher of mathematicsphysicschemistryastronomyphysiologycomparative anatomy and French in Paris. For one of his research papers, he was inducted in 1831 into the Royal Academy of Arras.[1] He organized and taught free courses for the underprivileged.
On February 1832, he married Amélie Gabrielle Boudet.

He was already in his early 50s when he became interested in the wildly popular phenomenon of spirit-tapping. At the time, strange phenomena attributed to the action of spirits were reported in many different places, most notably in the U.S. and France, attracting the attention of high society. The first such phenomena were at best frivolous and entertaining, featuring objects that moved or "tapped" under what was said to be spirit control. In some cases, this was alleged to be a type of communication: the supposed spirits answered questions by controlling the movements of objects so as to pick out letters to form words, or simply indicate "yes" or "no."
At the time, Franz Mesmer's theory of animal magnetism was popular in the upper reaches of society. When confronted with the phenomena described, some researchers, including Rivail, pointed out that animal magnetism might explain them. Rivail, however, after personally seeing a demonstration, quickly dismissed the animal-magnetism hypothesis as being insufficient to completely explain all the facts observed (see Chapters VIII and XIV in The Book on Mediums). Rivail was determined to understand exactly what was causing the physical effects popularly attributed to spirits.

As a teacher with little scientific background (he had never attended a university), Rivail decided to do his own research. Not being a medium himself, he compiled a list of questions and began working with mediums and channelers to put them to spirits. Soon the quality of the communications, allegedly with spirits, appeared to improve.
Rivail used the name "Allan Kardec" allegedly after a spirit identified as Zefiro, whom he had been communicating with, told him about a previous incarnation of his as a Druid by that name. Rivail liked the name and decided to use it to keep his Spiritists writings separate from his work, basically books for high school students.
On April 18, 1857 Rivail (signing himself "Allan Kardec") published his first book on Spiritism, The Spirits' Book, comprising a series of 1,018 answered questions [n 1] exploring matters concerning the nature of spirits, the spirit world, and the relations between the spirit world and the material world. This was followed by a series of other books, like The Book on Mediums and The Gospel According to Spiritism, and by a periodical, the Revue Spirite, which Kardec published until his death. Kardec thus produced the books that form the Spiritist Codification.
Allan Kardec coined the word "spiritism" Camille Flammarion, a French astronomer and author, said "spiritism is not a religion but a science".[2