Happy Tree Friends: False Alarm
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Overview: -Estimated achievement difficulty: 4/10 -Offline: 12 (200) -Online: 0 -Approximate amount of time to 200/1000: 5-10 hours -Minimum number of playthroughs needed: 1 playthrough -Number of missable achievements: None -Do cheat codes disable achievements: No cheats Introduction: Happy Tree Friends: False Alarm is based on the TV Show by Mondo Mini Clips, there might be a few frustrating levels so just have fun with it. Playthrough: Start the game by selecting the tutorial, completing it will give you Beginner's Luck achievement. Try to get at least 1 bronze and 1 silver in seperate levels to unlock Sweet Smell of Copper and Hi Ho Silver achievements. You can get these by spending more time in a level rather than rushing. After getting those achievements, finish another level without spending too much time and killing your happy tree friends, doing so would unlock You're Golden achievement. Try to get at least 500,000 score in every level to unlock the Give Yourself A Hand when you finish all 30 levels. After you finish A Whopper of a Tail in the whale zone level, you would unlock Piece of Cake. After finishing all 3 levels in the Junkyard level, you should unlock Give Yourself A Hand (if you got 500,000 in every level), The Midas Touch (If you got gold in all 30 levels refer to the achievement guide in tips on getting gold) and That's A Wrap. Refer to the achievement guide on how to unlock The Last Drop and Just What the doctor ordered, try and get 550,000 or more in every level to unlock You Da Bomb. Mop Up: The last achievement remaining isPlaying with fire. In order to unlock this, you must burn your tree friends to death. The best place would be the 1st level of Ski Lodge in the 1st room or From the bottom of the cart in the mine zone, just keep pressing and target your happy tree friend to burn them all it would take 30-45 minutes to finish and unlock the achievement. Conclusion: There you have it, you would get 200/200 in a couple of hours, there might be a few frustrating levels, so just have fun.
To get this just go thought the level as you would if you get to the end of the level and you score (the alarm bell) is still in the gold freeze you tree friends and wait until it is bronze.Note: The arrow on the Bell moves up 1/6 when your tree friends reach the goal.
We have seen some Greater Racket-tailed Drongos sometimes falsely give alarm calls when there was nothing to be alarmed about. How to explain the deceptive alarm calls of the Drongo! A few behavioural ecologists studied it and concluded that the clever Drongo raises the false alarm to send the foraging Babblers and Yellownapes to scurry off leaving the exposed insects behind only for the Drongo to feed on.
But that explanation does not seem very convincing to us. The Drongo mostly feeds on the flying insects trying to escape the Babblers and Yellownapes that usually probe leaf-litters and tree-trunks typically for the grubs. The Drongo, therefore, benefits more when those foragers are probing; not when they are alarmed and have stopped probing.
We think the playful Racket-tailed Drongo gives the false alarm as a prank somewhat like the proverbial 'cry wolf'. Behavioural ecologists probably, will not agree with that explanation. They need 'utilitarian' explanations for all bird-behaviours and reserve the capacity to play pranks and make sheer mischief only for humans and a few mammalian species.
In January, 1912, Miss Bird wrote: \"I am safely in Yezd, . . . the journey from Isfahan, owing to delays, took sixteen instead of ten days. . . . We had a false alarm of robbers and the muleteer drove our mules and donkeys back to the last village at a gallop ... It was disappointing . . . but the false alarm had saved us ... from a small robber band who were waiting about a mile beyond where we turned back. They captured another caravan . . . the owner was very distressed, but his friends tried to console him by repeating constantly, 'Do not boil, it was fate!' That night we joined a big camel caravan and marched from sunset to sunrise ... it was a glorious bright frosty night . . . but a bitter wind. Our caravanserai was on a mountain summit deep in snow, and it snowed for six hours over the pass and while we were descending to Nain. Here we heard a band of robbers had taken possession of the lonely caravanserai in the midst of the desert, and the Governor of Nain . . . said we must wait until the robbers moved, or a large caravan came along. The fourth morning . . . we rushed out, almost ready to hug one hundred and fifty camels with merchandise and money for the bank in Yezd; thirty-four armed men accompanied it. ... They gladly consented to our travelling with them, only we must wait twenty-four hours for a friend's caravan with sixty donkeys and thirty-four men to arrive. I wish you could have seen the cavalcade--each set of twenty camels fastened together and led by a man riding a donkey, our little party of five mules and my donkey, one guard sent by the governor to march with me, and then the sixty donkeys. Every bell had been muffled, no one was to speak aloud to man or animal, and my guard undertook to conduct us 'without road,' i.e. off the main road. We started a little before sunset, and by dark were four miles off the caravan road in the midst of a stony desert, it was a very dark night with a cutting wind and snow. The men were very much alarmed and asked if I was. I was so glad I could tell them that God had taken away all fear from me, I had asked for His protection and believed He would guard us. A number of men came round and asked me to pray with them in a whisper. We could see the robbers' fire on the mountain side, but the God-sent dark clouds hid us from view and we passed quickly and noiselessly along. The men longed to smoke but were afraid of the lights being seen; they were so thoughtful and kind, leading my donkey over bad places and making it keep in the middle of the caravan. At daybreak ... we had passed the 'thieves' place.' The men began to talk and untie the bells, and when I proposed to my guard that we should thank God that He had answered our prayer, such a number came round, exclaiming, 'Elohi' at the end of each sentence. . . . We were only allowed to remain while the bipeds had a hasty meal of bread and the quadrupeds of barley, and then went on ten miles to a larger village. My guard asked me about England, our constitution, rates, and taxes, and why English girls as well as boys were educated. I explained to him, and he exclaimed,' Nearly all the people in Persia are like wild animals wandering in the dark'; and then he listened quietly while I told him of Jesus Christ' the Light of the World.' To my surprise he said, 'We do not know, we have not seen the light.' \" 59ce067264
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