![]() ![]() Fighting, or gathering resources is done with the a single button, and the rest of the screen in both your browser or on your phone is filled with inventory, character statistics, and other useful hotkeys. The game is pretty straight forward, you either walk with the joystick or use the WASD buttons on the keyboard. The controls aren’t very difficult to use either. Jumping into the game you are thrown right in the Newbie Village, and you are given small tasks to learn the basics of the game. This game is a bit of a mixture between Minecraft and Runescape, while the farming elements in Mystera Legacy also remind me of the likes of Stardew Valley. Mystera Legacy is a 2D MMORPG sandbox game that is very familiar, made in the style of a lot of the iconic Game Maker Pro games, or other flash games. But sometimes you find a game that has very basic controls, ones of the likes that remind you of a lot of handheld games, and Mystera Legacy falls right into that category. Despite MMORPGs taking off on this quickly growing platform, I just really dislike the controls and how small the screen is. I never really look at the Play Store and just download random games to check them out. I have to be honest, I am not a huge fan of games that can be played on your mobile device. Mystera Legacy is another one of these games, that I personally wouldn’t have found if I weren’t told about it, even though they are on the Play Store and the game is fully playable in the browser! Yet the majority of their players ran into these games by blind luck, and it shows how incredibly difficult it still is for smaller studios and development teams to have their game advertised and shown to every fan. Many of these games look very charming, and definitely have found a niche to be successful in. A lot of the major MMORPGs we can look forward to are either delayed, or still heavily being worked on, so there isn’t quite a lot to look forward to unless you check out the many indies you can find around. This year we have partnered with the Land Trust Alliance and are co-hosting the event with the River Revitalization Foundation.We have a bit of a drought right now. The conversion of this once blighted site into a riverfront park is very special for urban dwellers, who now have improved access to additional green space in the city and the river valley system of trails. These are two of Milwaukee’s most significant conservation sites. Hope to see you all there! This year, we are excited to announce the Beer Line Trail and Wheelhouse Property as the location for our 2012 Land Legacy Gathering. The Ice Age Trail is a thousand-mile footpath, protected and managed by the Ice Age Trail Alliance, and highlights the unique features carved into Wisconsin’s landscape by a glacier over 12,000 years ago.įor more information on this year’s event, please visit our website. At the Gathering, guests were taken on a guided hike of the Table Bluff segment of the Ice Age Trail. The Ice Age Trail Alliance, based in Cross Plains, was our co-host site in 2011. The event involved a guided hike of the Kinnickinnic River Canyon ecosystem restoration project. ![]() The Kinnickinnic River flows through 96,000 square acres and the protected area includes creeks, springs, wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat, native plant communities, rare and endangered species, bluffs, coulees, and family farms. In 2010, the Gathering was held at the Kinnickinnic River Canyon Property in River Falls and co-hosted with the Kinnickinnic River Land Trust. The Gathering included a hike to the Historic Leopold Shack which was the Leopold family’s weekend retreat and served as inspiration for the writing, observations, and lessons of Aldo Leopold. ![]() The Aldo Leopold Legacy Center was built from pines planted by the Leopold family and is the first LEED Platinum, carbon neutral building in the world. Attendees hiked through the Preserve’s 438 acres of woodlands, wetlands, and open fields.The first ever Land Legacy Gathering, co-hosted by the Baraboo Range Preservation Association and the Aldo Leopold Foundation in 2008, was held at the Aldo Leopold Legacy Centerin Baraboo Wisconsin. The Mequon Nature Preserve is a groundbreaking example of a restored natural area in an urban/suburban community. In 2009, the Gathering was held at the Mequon Nature Prese rve in partnership with the Ozaukee Washington Land Trust. In this, our fifth year of the event, we hope you make plans to attend – all are welcome! – and join us as we look back at the previous Gathering sites. Each year we hold the event at a different, significant conservation site in Wisconsin. Our annual Land Legacy Gathering honors the people who make it possible for us to continue Wisconsin’s incredible land legacy, and offers attendees the opportunity to learn how their support is advancing the land trust movement, locally, statewide and nationally. ![]()
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