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Go Home Ball 2 walkthrough Video Guide & Cheats

Refer the Go Home Ball 2 walkthrough from the below article which will give you full details of playing this game very easily.Go home Ball 2 is the second part of the Go Home Ball game, physics based puzzle game from king. Place springs, & sticks to get the colored balls to all the stars and reach their proper holes. The lost ball is return and he needs your help to go back home. At your disposal, there are a range of tools and tricks including tree logs, jumping springs and a touching hand. Use all tools and tricks to help the ball to go home through 24 thrilling levels in the forest.

Go Home Ball 2 walkthrough

Open the game and select one by one level. To return the lost ball at home, place wooden sticks by dragging mouse up and down in their way.

Level one to three is very easy, which you can clear rapidly. But in the level 4, you will get 2 balls: red and blue, first set wooden stick to down the red ball in the hole then push ball by using hand which is situated in inventory item, then do same process for blue ball.

In level 5, you will get hanging basket, first drag the ball in the basket then it will go down in the hole. Go to next level, first push the ball in the spoon by using hand and fall the stone on spoon behind part and then ball will bounce and directly enter into the wooden hole. In the level 6, you will also get yellow ball, by using a hand sign also drag it into the hole.

Enter into the level 7, where you have to use the jumper and hand to drag the blue and yellow ball. Go to next level, where first drag the ball so stone will fall into the trolley, then again drag the ball into the trolley, so stone will fall on spoon. Then blue ball will bounce, and go into the wooden hole.

Go into next level and get red ball and stone. First drag the stone into hanging basket by using hand, then drag the red ball and place it into spoon then fall the stone on the spoon, so ball will bounce and go into the hole and clear the level.  Enter into level 10, where you will get two hanging basket, put red ball one by one in basket and fall down on slippery and complete level.

Enter into the level 11, set wooden stick to drag it. Go into next level and get 2 yellow balls, located with stone above the pillar and red, located in the spoon. First drag the stone and fall on spoon and red ball will bounce and go on the hole. Then drag yellow ball by using hand.

Enter into level 13, drag the red ball into basket by using hand and drag it above from slippery and in the last, use jumper to bounce the ball for going into wooden hole. Go into next level, where you will get scales and red and blue ball. First drag blue ball into left scales then drag red ball into right scales and when it came nearer to the wooden hole, drag it by using hand.

Enter into level 15, get red and yellow ball, first drag one ball by setting wooden stick, at the last set jumper for going to wooden hole, then drag the yellow ball and finish level.

Enter into level 16, where you will get three balls red, blue and yellow. First drag blue ball stone, drag red ball, fall yellow stone, bounce red ball and go into red wooden hall then drag one by one blue and red ball.

Enter into level 17, drag blue ball, so wooden stick will automatically set in the way and drag red ball, when you drag it, blue ball will go into trolley and set jumper at the place of trolley for dragging red ball and at last set wooden stick and complete this level, then go into level 18, once again you will get scales, first drag red ball carefully to set in the scales, then drag blue ball. Then drag the red ball when it reaches at top pillar and blue ball when it reaches at down pillar. At last, use jumper to bounce red ball from going into the wooden hole.

Enter into level 19, which is very easy. Drag red ball and use wooden stick and jumper to reach wooden hole and go into the next level. Drag ball, set wooden stick and set ball into wheel very carefully and reach at land of tree. Then drag the ball on flying stone very carefully and finish the level.

Enter into level 21, which is little difficult, first drag the red ball on stone leap and set it into wheel and after clearing the wheel, set wooden stick to reach at red wooden hole. Then drag blue ball first using jumper to go on wheel and go down and once again set jumper to go into blue hole. Go into next level, drag red into trolley and dreg trolley by setting wooden stick, then take it into hanging basket and fall down on spoon then fall the stone on spoon and red ball will bounce. Go on to the yellow ball then first yellow ball must go into yellow hole, then red ball and complete the level.

Enter into level 23, first drag red ball using wooden stick to reach at last destination and then drag blue ball, set wooden stick to go on to next way and at last use jumper and go into hall. Then reach at last level 24, it is very beautiful. First drag red ball into basket, then drag the yellow ball into hole, fall the red ball on leap and reach at red hole and then drag the blue ball, and place it on wheel and reach at blue hole and complete the game.

More: http://ball.kizi2.com

Easter Island’s fading rock stars

THERE is plenty to not like about Easter Island: to start with, it’s too far away from anywhere to make it easy to get to, the place is overrun with feral horses and the island is struggling to get a few trees growing after being deforested in its early history.

Even the famous moai, the mysterious sculptures that brought the island to the attention of the world, are mostly ruins, lying where they were pushed over in ancient times. It’s only a relative few of the extraordinary heads that have been restored to their former glory watching over the land. The island’s history is a sad story of conquest and a population decimated.

It is not the kind of place you go for tropical palms and golden beaches, although it does have some of these. Strangely, these negative aspects of Easter Island or Rapa Nui, as it is known to the locals, blend to create a mysterious and compelling destination. It’s a place where it feels like magic still lives, where mystery is commonplace and one’s imagination can run free.

You could probably hire a car and whiz around the island in a day or two and visit most of the best-known spots, but you will likely leave without getting any real insight into this mysterious place.

Our small travelling band of journalists was fortunate to have on hand the services of Rapa Nui man Beno Atan, a guide working out of the Explora lodge Posada de Mike Rapu.

Beno is an intense 27-year-old who believes in the spirituality of his homeland and poses plenty of unanswered questions about the history and culture of Easter Island.

And there is mystery aplenty.

From where did the original inhabitants come? They arrived about AD 700. The late Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl concluded they were from South America, a theory that now seems largely debunked.

Genetic testing suggests the population has Polynesian roots and they used their incredible sailing skills to pinpoint Easter Island.

For a thousand years, the population grew, building to more than 12,000 before the society fell apart in the 1600s.

Did a new wave of invaders cause the original inhabitants’ demise? Why were the island’s nearly 900 moai pushed over and what happened to all the island’s trees?

How were the huge moai, weighing up to 50 tonnes, hauled tens of kilometres all over the island?

There are plenty of mysteries and plenty of theories to answer them but, without written records, there is not much certainty.

Easter Island society recovered for a time in the 1600s when the cult of the birdman took root, by which young men competed for the right of their tribe to rule the island for a year. This bloody ritual took place at Orongo on the cliffs of a volcano.

The brave contenders had to climb down the cliff and swim shark-infested waters, battling among themselves to reach a small island and collect a tern’s egg, a prize that gave their chief the right to rule for a year.

Another almost-fatal blow came to the population with the arrival in the 1700s of Europeans who brought with them disease and then, in 1862, slavers from Peru who transported 1500 people, a third of the population, back to the South American mainland.

Within a year, all but 15 of these people were dead. These few survivors were returned to their homes but brought with them smallpox which killed all but 111 inhabitants by 1877.

Our guide Beno talks passionately about the history and culture of his people.

There’s a mystical touch as he speaks of mana, a mix of technological and sociological skills and mysticism, which gave the locals the ability to “walk” the giant stones.

He doesn’t hold much truck with theories of rope and pulleys and even less with travellers from outer space, but there’s plenty of room for imagination in Beno’s stories about the island history and culture.

Over three days, he took us all over the bumpy roads of the little 24km by 12km island, taking in the main moai sites and providing fascinating insights into its mysteries.

Beno seemed to have an almost personal relationship with the 887 moai, some of which are restored, some half carved at the quarry and many toppled at the end of the civilisation that built them.

From the stories of the birdman cult to the mysteries on the origins of the original people of Easter Island, Beno’s passion was central to understanding much of the intrigue of the island. If a good mystery and a healthy dose of mysticism are your cup of tea, for a travel destination head to Easter Island.

The writer was a guest of LAN Airlines.

Go2

EASTER ISLAND

- Getting there

LAN Airlines has six weekly flights from Sydney to Santiago, Chile, via Auckland, with connections to Easter Island and more than 80 other South American destinations.

LAN also has non-stop Sydney-Santiago flights every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday in partnership with Qantas. Contact travel agents or call LAN reservations on 1800 558 129 or see lan.com.

Explora package Three-night packages at the Explora Hotel Posada de Mike Rapu Easter Island start at $US2385 a person, twin share, and include accommodation, all meals, house wine, soft drinks and activities and explorations with English-speaking guides and return airport transfers.

Prices are available for children four to 18.

FIFA 12: UEFA Euro 2012

Over the last few decades football has strayed far from its working-class roots. Bleak rain-soaked terraces, pints of cloudy ale and half-time pies have slowly been replaced by generic stadia, overpriced continental lager and the dreaded prawn sandwich. It’s become unreasonably expensive to attend top-flight matches. And supporting your nation at this year’s Euro 2012 finals in Ukraine and Poland is beyond the means of most individuals. But even if you want to stay at home, and experience the competition from your sofa, controller in hand, you’ll too have to pay a premium. UEFA Euro 2012 is DLC for best-selling FIFA 12, and costs 1800 MS points on Xbox LIVE and £15.99/$25.99 on the PlayStation Store. Its high price-tag isn’t necessarily a criticism, but inevitably it invites greater scrutiny of what content is on offer.

When it comes to gameplay, there’s very little to say. It’s FIFA 12, unaltered. If you’re at all familiar with that game, there’s nothing new to learn or get your head around. FIFA 12 is a great game, and avoided series stagnation by incorporating several new features this year and reinventing aspects of its gameplay, such as the way in which you defend. And it’s all present and correct here, ensuring the gameplay experience is of the same high quality. So what are you actually getting when you download UEFA Euro 2012?

England take on the Germans once again. Please, no penalties.

The real differences are superficial. What you’re paying for, ultimately, boils down to a new lick of paint and a handful of game modes. Once downloaded, Euro 2012 appears as a new tab on FIFA 12′s main navigation bar. Select it, and you’ll tumble down the rabbit hole and emerge into a psychedelic world saturated by the tournament’s official branding. Brace yourself, though – it’s dominated by a startling shade of magenta, which stains everything, like Ukrainian borscht, from the home screen to the constant scorecard. It’s strikingly different, and more than a little garish when compared to FIFA’s normally reserved and slick façade.

Some of the graphical tweaks have been trumpeted as “spectacular presentation”, but they really amount to little more than the addition of the tournament’s 8 official stadia and the match atmosphere being ratcheted up a notch or two. But confetti canons and fireworks for the victors, and a few more unfurled flags, can’t really communicate the carnival of a major international tournament. And most of these additions, though well-intentioned, fade once a match begins, and you soon find yourself playing a game of FIFA 12. Yes, the commentary may occasionally allude to your striker being in contention for the Golden Boot, and yes, the branding boards might have authentic sponsors now on them, but it’s all veneer. The grain hasn’t been touched.

All 8 official stadiums are included in the expansion pack.

There are some more significant changes, it should be noted. The roster of international teams has been expanded. Every single UEFA nation is now present, including the likes of Wales and Israel who were absent from FIFA 12. (Although Wales’s team is bizarrely populated by mispelled imposters, including G. Belth for Gareth Bale.)

Clearly, the addition of every nation has been done to make Euro 2012 appeal to even those whose national team didn’t make the championship. This mainly comes into play in the DLC’s main gameplay mode – the Euro 2012 tournament itself. You can choose to play as any team in the competition, but if your team didn’t qualify, they can easily be substituted for any nation that did. Out comes Spain; in goes Scotland. The mode is as straightforward as the competition itself: 3 group games and 3 knock-out games are all that stands between you and the coveted trophy. Injuries and cards are obviously more of a concern in a tournament situation. It’s exactly what you’d expect it to be, and once you’ve lifted the cup, which is mildly satisfying, it’s unlikely that you’ll keep reliving the campaign.

Something a little bit different for the FIFA series is Expedition, in which you’re confronted by what looks like a map of Europe, torn from the pages of a fantasy novel. But instead of dragons, here be repetitive games of football. You start out with a team composed of one player of your choice and a ragtag bunch of middling reserves drawn from low-ranking European nations. From within groups, you’re able to ‘attack’ nations by playing a typical game of football.

You can play as any of the 53 UEFA nations.

The spoils of war are incremental: defeat a nation once, and you’ll be offered one of their reserve team player; beat them again, and you can take one of their subs; win a third time, and you get the opportunity to snatch one of their starting eleven. But the rewards don’t just improve the quality of your team; you also get the opportunity to build new roads across Europe, connecting you with previously-inaccessible nations. But if you lose games, the roads are sometimes destroyed, isolating your team and impeding your quest for European domination.

The aim, of course, is to end up with a map of Europe threaded with a dense network of roads and the ultimate European dream-team. But perhaps the most baffling of prizes awarded for a victory is a ‘mosaic’ piece. Every team has 3 mosaic pieces to earn, each one a photo of that nation’s team in action. To collect them all you have to play and win 159 games. It’s a ludicrously-weak incentive to keep slogging away at Expedition mode, and it’s almost unthinkable that anyone will persevere to the point of completion. It’s really difficult to regard the mosaic gimmick as anything but cynical padding, and the same goes for Expedition mode itself. Although it may represent itself as a game of strategy and tactics, it’s really not much more than a seemingly-interminable fixture schedule.

Can you beat Spain to win the European Championship?

The price-point of UEFA Euro 2012 places it at the high-end of downloadable content, and simply it doesn’t offer enough to justify this weighty price-tag. When you think that once upon a time it may have been released as a standalone boxed title, it seems like a steal – an act of forward-thinking generosity made possible by digital distribution. But when it sits on digital shelves alongside the likes of the delightfully frustrating Fez and the rapturous Journey (both of which cost less), it can’t but help look unreasonably priced. Saying that, the core gameplay remains great, yet that’s because it’s indistinguishable from FIFA 12 – a game that came out 8 months ago. You’re paying a premium for authenticity, lent to the game by the official branding of the tournament, not for something that transforms the experience.

If you’re a football obsessive or a stickler for the real thing, UEFA Euro 2012 is probably worth grafting onto your existing copy of FIFA 12. But for many, the same experience can easily be approximated by playing the game they already own with a through-ball from their imagination.

Kizi2.com – Play Kizi Games Now

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So, play Flash games here and enjoy yourself, because we are the name of enjoyment and entertainment.

Michael Phelps keeps his Beijing gold medals in a makeup case, sleeps in a high-altitude chamber

The biggest news from Michael Phelps’ recent interview on “60 Minutes” wasn’t that he plans to retire after the upcoming Summer Games, but that he keeps his eight gold medals from Beijing in a traveling makeup case and sleeps in a high-altitude chamber.*

Phelps made the revelations to Anderson Cooper in a segment aired Sunday night. First, he showed off his gold-medal carrier:

(60 Minutes)

For an extra layer of security, he stuffs the eight golds in a gray t-shirt:

(60 Minutes)

He later talked to Cooper about his high-tech sleeping chamber that allows him to sleep at the equivalent of 8,500 feet above sea level.

Phelps wouldn’t show the contraption to CBS cameras, but tweeted a picture of it to his fans:

(@MichaelPhelps via Baltimore Sun)

The $15,000 device removes oxygen from the room. Hypoxico, the maker of the device, says on its website that its product “triggers the onset of a range of physiological adaptations geared towards enhancing the efficiency of the body’s respiratory, cardiovascular and oxygen utilization systems.”

Phelps spoke of the oddity of having a separate chamber in which to sleep. ”Once I’m already in my room i still have to open a door to get into my bed,” he told Cooper. “It’s just like a giant box. It’s like the boy in the bubble.”

Microsoft makes $99 Xbox 360 official – with a few catches

After a week of speculation, Microsoft has formally announced plans to offer a subscription-based Xbox 360/Kinect bundle requiring a two-year paid commitment.

Customers will pay $99 for a 4 GB Xbox 360 and Kinect up front, then will pay $15 per month for the next two years. They’ll enjoy an Xbox Live Gold subscription during that time period, but no additional functionality in the service.

People who decide they’ve had enough can opt out of the program, but early termination fees are as high as $250, depending on when the contract is broken. The bundle is targeted at consumers who have sat on the fence as the Xbox 360 price has held steady for the past two years.

However, it’s not necessarily a better deal.

The initial $99 for the new offer is considerably lower than the $299 an Xbox/Kinect bundle will cost you today. But in the long run, the subscription package will cost people more. The monthly fees will run nearly $360 over the life of the subscription, bringing the total to about $460. Buying that bundle and two one-year subscriptions to Xbox Live Gold would only run $419 — possibly less if you find Xbox Live gift card on sale.

Then there’s the matter of availability. The offer is only available at Microsoft retail stores, of which there are a mere 21 locations around the country.

People considering the deal should also keep in mind that the next generation Xbox is rumored to launch sometime in late 2013. That’s well within the two-year subscription timeline, meaning anyone who buys the bundle today will likely have to pay roughly $72 – $96 in early termination fees if they opted to pick up the new system and cancel out. (Though, to be fair, early adopters aren’t likely to take advantage of this deal.)

The move is a continuation of Microsoft’s strategy to expand the Xbox beyond the gaming world. Rather than competing with the Wii (currently $140), upcoming Wii U (whose price won’t be known until well after E3) and the PlayStation 3 ($250), the $99 Xbox is targeting home entertainment systems like Roku and Apple TV.

Another upside of the lowered price is that it leaves more initial cash in pocket for gamers to spend on new games, often a concern for new buyers who have forked over hundreds on the hardware alone.

French president-elect Hollande: I won’t be ‘difficult’ for Obama

Hold the Freedom Fries. The new French President-elect François Hollande wants the world to know that he speaks English—better than proudly pro-American Nicolas Sarkozy—and isn’t out to “make things difficult for Barack Obama” on issues like Afghanistan.

“Yes, I speak English, more fluently than the former president. But a French president has to speak French!” Hollande told Slate.fr—in English—in a wide-ranging interview published one day after he beat Sarkozy in a runoff election.

The Socialist was to meet with Obama next week before two important international summits: a G8 gathering sure to focus on ways to pull the world economy out of its slump, and a NATO meeting to discuss the way forward in Afghanistan.

Hollande said he saw potential areas of agreement with Obama on economic issues and praised the American president for charting a different foreign-policy course than his predecessor.

“I will therefore assert France’s independence without making things difficult for Barack Obama,” said the new French leader.

Hollande promised during his campaign to get France’s roughly 3,600 combat troops out of Afghanistan by year’s end. He said in the interview that he would keep that promise but do so in close cooperation with NATO allies.

Hollande has also pushed what he calls a pro-growth agenda as the remedy to economic woes in France, a break from Sarkozy’s push for belt-tightening measures and a potential area of dispute with Germany.At the White House, spokesman Jay Carney played down possible disagreements, celebrating the “enduring” relationship between France and the United States and predicting it would be “a vital part of our national security in the future.”

“We have issues with France that we will work on regardless of who’s president,” Carney told reporters.

No one on either side of the Atlantic has predicted a return to the ugly tone of Franco-American relations in the run-up the war in Iraq, when American lawmakers angry that Paris opposed the conflict voted to rename “French fries” as “Freedom fries” in the House cafeteria (the move caused some consternation in France, but not for the intended reason: “French fries” are regarded as a Belgian dish).

The election of Sarkozy played a role in patching up the frayed bilateral relations—he was even feted at the White House with a state dinner in 2007. His public fondness for the United States sometimes earned him the mocking moniker “Sarkozy the American”—but his English was poor.

Hollande, who is expected to be less friendly toward Washington, told Slate.fr that a French president must understand English and be able to have direct conversations with other world leaders.

But ”when I took part in party leader summits in Europe, it was sometimes unpleasant for me to hear friends—Romanians, Poles, Portuguese, Italians sometimes—speak English,” Hollande said, adding that he understood the need to use English in “informal” get-acquainted conversations.

Hollande noted that Obama was locked in his own re-election fight, and said the outcome would be of “great importance for the world,” but he did not take sides.

If Obama loses, Hollande will find himself working with Mitt Romney, who speaks fluent French, the result of time spent in France as a Mormon missionary decades ago.

Chirpy Angry Birds maker eyes IPO golden egg

(Reuters) – Angry Birds maker Rovio Entertainment said sales jumped tenfold to $100 million last year as gamers flocked to download its titles, adding business was now strong enough for a stock market listing.

The Finnish startup making Angry Birds games — in which players use a slingshot to attack pigs who steal the birds’ eggs — has been valued by analysts at up to $9 billion, just short of that of struggling world No.2 phonemaker Nokia.

Rovio said on Monday its finances were good enough for a listing after revealing a highly profitable 2011 in its first public disclosure of business results and forecast a bumper year ahead.

Rovio, originally founded in 2003, became a global phenomenon after it launched Angry Birds for Apple’s iPhone in late 2009.

Since then it has remained at top of the gaming charts with more than 800 million downloads and it had 200 million monthly users at the end of 2011, just short of U.S.-based Zynga’s 240 million.

“Rovio has fended off all rivals so far,” said analyst Tero Kuittinen from Finnish mobile firm Alekstra. “Rovio is still the king of the mountain, despite stiff recent challenges by OMGPOP and Disney’s ‘Where’s My Water?’”

Rovio plans to launch several more titles in 2012, which include a non-Angry Birds title, Chief Executive Mikael Hed told Reuters in an interview.

Rovio predicted further growth driven by growing cellphone sales and its significant investments in product development, branding, brand protection and corporate infrastructure.

“2012 looks fantastic,” Hed said. “We have had some very strong download numbers over four months.”

Its Angry Birds Space game was downloaded more than 50 million times in 35 days since its launch in March.

Rovio is also expanding its brand to toys and playgrounds, and is taking the birds to the big screen. The first full-motion animated movie featuring the characters is in the works and the short animations are a YouTube hit.

Consumer products, which includes merchandising and licensing, generated around 30 percent of revenues last year, with the share higher in the fourth quarter, Hed said.

WORKING ON LISTING

At the shareholders meeting on Monday listing plans were not on the agenda, but Rovio has earlier said the company would likely be ready for an initial public offering next year, either in New York or Hong Kong.

“This company is preparing itself and getting ready,” said Anders Lindeberg, Rovio’s head of investor relations, adding the firm was working on meeting corporate governance requirements.

Rovio reported 2011 profit before tax of 48 million on sales of 75.4 million euros ($99 million), for a margin of 64 percent. The company did not provide historic data, but has said 2010 revenues were around $10 million.

Last year Rovio raised $42 million from venture capital firms including Accel Partners, which previously backed Facebook and Baidu, and Skype founder Niklas Zennstroem’s venture capital firm Atomico Ventures.

Rovio was founded after three students including Niklas Hed — CEO Mikael Hed’s cousin and now Rovio’s COO — won a game-development competition sponsored by Finnish mobile phone maker Nokia and Hewlett-Packard CO.

Shares in Nokia, whose headquarters are just a few buildings away from Rovio, were 1.4 percent lower on Monday, valuing the firm at 8.84 billion euros ($11.6 billion). ($1 = 0.7625 euros)

(Reporting By Tarmo Virki; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

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