Mountain Maniac is a funny action game. Mission of the game is to smash boulders down the mountain and crush every animal, car or building in your path.
Yummy Nuts is a lovely physics-based puzzle game. Your option is to feed your red squirrel baby which nests in a giant ice mountain. So cut the given ropes, use helpful bubbles and piggies to catch all tasty nuts in each level and deliver those to the hungry scion.
After the dragon egg fell out of its nest, it rolled off a giant mountain, cracked and broke. Lead the little fire-breather through dangerous Dragoniada the whole way back home to its family. Jump on platforms, collect stars and other treasures but avoid to touch enemy creatures.
In the third chapter of the fun-addicting puzzle game our mexican buddys hired as a sheriff of a small village. Help him with his new challenge to save some children from the top of the mountain. Therefore you have to remove physics-based objects in order to make Pancho fly with his two balloons up to the top safely.
This time Mario set up an ambush and attack Bowser army with everything he got. Bowser send his army upward to the mountain by using balloon. Mario will has to hit those balloons down in order to defeat the entire army.
The visitors built a huge first innings total, largely due to a century from Pavan Rathnayake, and Australia A's hitters faced a searching test to salvage their two-game series against Sri Lanka A in Darwin.
Sri Lanka A totally retaliated against rival captain Jason Sangha's decision to put them in by advancing to declare 486 for 6 on day two of the second four-day match, having started at 263 for 4.
At the Marrara Cricket Ground on Monday, the hosts were 76 for 1 at stumps, with Jake Weatherald at 45 and Kurtis Patterson at 19. The first game was tied, leaving them with a mountain to climb to win the series.
Nathan McSweeney, the former Test opener for Australia A, was bowled between bat and pad by offspinner Nishan Peiris for 12, failing to duplicate his excellent 94 from the first game.
When Rathnayake returned at 43, he took full advantage of a perfect batting strip to reach 122 off 223 balls, his team's second century after Nuwanidu Fernando's 102 on the first day.
Sonal Dinusha, who returned on five, joined the run-fest by reaching 88 off 191 deliveries. In 53 overs, he and Rathnayake contributed 170 for the fifth wicket.
Rathnayake was tempted into a reckless clip to short midwicket by left-arm spinner Zanden Jeh, who was superbly caught low down by Oliver Peake, ending their stand.
Dinusha and Sohan de Livera kept punishing the bowlers, scoring 40 runs in 14 overs when Patterson caught Dinusha at mid-on after he mishit a lofted pull.
Zeh, a 22-year-old unknown who was the best of the eight bowlers deployed despite never having played state cricket at the highest level, took a third wicket as a result. As Australian officials continue to look for good left-arm spinners, the Queenslander was selected from the left-field for the opening match.
De Livera finished 50 not out at the time of the declaration, being the fifth batter to reach a half-century or more.
McSweeney was bowled between bat and pad after hitting two fours in his 20 balls. The home te