Game Into The Dead
Into The Dead
Working place: Wellington
Founding day: 6-12-2012 (12 years old)
Population of the world 2012: 7,021,836,029
Global rank: #68107
Facebook: facebook.com/intothedeadgame
Email: updating
Phone number: updating
Into the Dead is a very interesting and engaging game where you play as a lucky pilot who survived a terrible plane crash. But when you wake up, surrounded by countless zombies, is it luck? And the only way to survive is to run far.
How to play:
Controls in the game are very flexible, you can choose to tilt screen, press and hold the navigation key on either side of the screen or the left and right navigation key cluster to the same left or right side of the screen. Either way, you touch the right side of the screen to shoot or use weapons. The gameplay of Into the Dead is very simple, encapsulated in three words "Run to live" (ensure that more of you will enjoy it after experiencing). That's right, your only mission is to run as far as you can. Of course, it won't be easy, because there will be a lot of undead standing in your way. You need to dodge or destroy them when you have a weapon in hand.
Above all, your path will pass through fields, forests, cornfields or vast farms. The huge crowd of zombies everywhere (the scariest are the lying young people, they will sit up when you approach them) will be no small challenge in your journey. Along the way, you will be supported by supply boxes filled with guns, ammo and countless other weapons.
Sound and graphics:
The background music of Into the Dead has mysterious colors, gentle and melodious rhythms, but when you suddenly drop your soul to the music and get caught by a zombie, it will make you startled and scared. The sound effects in the game are extremely realistic, you can clearly hear the sound of each weapon,...
Game graphics with dark tones are the main help for your journey. You add more suspense and attraction. The weapons are beautifully designed, creating their strength and power. Your journey will pass through countless different scenes from fields, farms to mysterious forests. The herds of undead when viewed from afar are only black, but when you get close to them you will see that they are meticulously cared for with different costumes and appearances.
Close relationship
Height: updating
Weight: updating
Measurements: updating
Into The Dead founding day 6-12-2012 (at the age of 12).
Where is Game Into The Dead's birth place, what is Zodiac/Chinese Zodiac?
Into The Dead was born in Wellington, of New Zealand. is a Game, whose Zodiac is Sagittarius, and who Chinese Zodiac is The Dragon. Into The Dead's global rank is 68107 and whose rank is 30 in list of famous Game. Population of the world in 2012 is about 7,021,836,029 persons.
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Into the Dead is a very interesting and attractive game
Into the Dead Game interface image
Game Into the Dead graphic image
Game Into the Dead will bring players interesting experiences
Top famous Game
Top famous Zodiac of Sagittarius
Top famous Chinese Zodiac of The Dragon
Top celebrities born in 2012
Top celebrities born in December
Top celebrities born in 6th
Born in Wellington
Comment:
Cotent:
Events in 2012 and 6-12
Events in the world in the birth year of Into The Dead
- Jan. 4: The European Union imposes an oil embargo on Iran in an attempt to get Iran to halt uranium enrichment and end its nuclear weapons efforts. Feb. 15: Iran warns six European countries that it might cut them off from Iranian oil. The threat is made to the ambassadors of Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Greece and Portugal at the Foreign Ministry in Tehran.
- Feb. 1: At least 73 people are killed in a fight between fans of rival teams at a soccer match in Port Said, Egypt.
- March 4: Vladimir Putin wins the presidential election in Russia, claiming 64% of the vote. It will be his third full term as president of Russia.
- March 10: A U.S. soldier goes on a door-to-door rampage in Afghanistan, brutally killing 17 civilians, including nine children. March 23: The U.S. military announces that Army Staff Sgt. Robert Bales has been charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder in the attacks.
- March 21: Syrian president Bashar al-Assad agrees to a cease-fire. The UN-brokered plan calls on the Syrian government to stop killing civilians, engage in talks with the opposition, withdraw forces from the streets, and begin a transition to a democratic, political system. The country has been in a civil war for several months, following the March 2011 uprising. April 12: The cease-fire goes into effect, but observers are skeptical that it will last. May 26: 32 children under age 10 are killed when the Syrian government attacks the village of Houla. The United Nations blames the deaths on government tanks and artillery, saying many of the victims were executed in their homes. President Assad, however, claims terrorists carried out the attack. The cease-fire is considered moot. June 12: A United Nations official declares that Syria is in a state of civil war. June 22: The Syrian military shoots down a Turkish military jet. President Abdullah Gul of Turkey responds by saying that his country will do "whatever is necessary" in retaliation. Aug. 2: Kofi Annan resigns as UN special envoy to Syria, citing the refusal of the Syrian government to implement the UN-backed peace plan, intensifying violence by rebels, and discord within the Security Council.
- April 1: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who in October 2010 was released after spending nearly 20 years under house arrest, wins a seat in parliament.
- May 1: On the first anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden, President Barack Obama makes a surprise visit to Afghanistan. During his visit, Obama signs an agreement with Afghan president Hamid Karzai that says the U.S. will provide Afghanistan development assistance for 10 years after troops withdraw in 2013.
- May 6: Francois Hollande defeats Nicolas Sarkozy to become president of France. With the victory, Hollande becomes the first Socialist president since Francois Mitterrand left office in 1995.
- June 11: Hosni Mubarak, former president of Egypt, is sentenced to life in prison for being an accomplice in the killing of unarmed protestors during the January 2011 demonstrations.
- June 17: The Center-right New Democracy party prevails in parliamentary elections in Greece. June 20: New Democracy quickly forms a coalition with Pasok and the Democratic Left, and Antonis Samaras, the leader of New Democracy, is sworn in as prime minister.
- June 24: Egyptian election officials declare Mohamed Morsi, the Muslim Brotherhood candidate, the winner of presidential election. Nov. 22: Morsi announces a brazen power grab when he declares authority over the courts, thereby removing any check on his actions by the courts. He says the move is necessary because the judiciary, made up of Hosni Mubarak appointees, is threatening to suspend the constitutional assembly before it completes the task of drafting a new constitution. Nov. 29: Under threat of being suspended by the courts, the constitutional assembly hastily approves a draft document, which is widely criticized for its ambiguity and lack of depth and originality. Dec. 26: President Morsi signs the new constitution into law. The referendum passed in two rounds of voting, on Dec. 14 and Dec. 22. About 64% of voters approved the constitution, but turnout was low—less than 33%.
- July 7: For the first time since Col. Muammar Qaddafi was ousted, Libyans vote in a national election. The National Forces Alliance, a secular party led by Mahmoud Jibril, a Western-educated political scientist, prevailed over Islamist parties, including the Muslim Brotherhood, in the election to form a national congress.
- July 27: The 2012 Summer Olympics open in London. More than 10,000 athletes from 205 countries participate in the Games. July 31: Michael Phelps wins his 19th Olympic medal, becoming the winningest Olympic athlete of all time. He surpassed the record held by Russian gymnast Larisa Latynina.
- Aug. 22: After 19 years of negotiations, Russia joins the newest member of the World Trade Organization.
- Sep. 11: Armed gunmen storm the American consulate in Benghazi, Libya, and shoot and kill U.S. ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and three other embassy officials.
- Oct. 7 Hugo Chávez is elected to a third term as president of Venezuela.
- Oct. 9 In Pakistan, Taliban members shoot 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai in the head and neck. The shooting occurs while Yousafzai is on her way home on a school bus filled with children. She was targeted for her outspokenness against the Taliban and her determination to get an education.
- Nov. 29: The UN General Assembly upgrades the status of the Palestinian Authority from current observer to non-member state.
- Dec. 12: North Korea successfully launches a rocket into orbit. The launch indicates that the country is inching closer toward developing the expertise to build an intercontinental ballistic missile.
Founding day Into The Dead (6-12) in history
- Day 6-12 year 1884: Construction of the Washington Monument was completed.
- Day 6-12 year 1889: Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the Confederate States of America, died in New Orleans.
- Day 6-12 year 1923: A presidential address was broadcast on the radio for the first time when Calvin Coolidge spoke before Congress.
- Day 6-12 year 1926: French impressionist painter Claude Monet died at age 86.
- Day 6-12 year 1973: Gerald Ford was sworn in as vice president, replacing Spiro T. Agnew.
- Day 6-12 year 1992: The destruction of a mosque in India by Hindu extremists set off two months of Muslim-Hindu fighting that claimed at least 2,000 lives.
- Day 6-12 year 1998: Hugo Chavez elected president of Venezuela.