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MeiQ: Labyrinth of Death – PS Vita Game

Original price was: $105.00.Current price is: $69.97.

-33%
(62 customer reviews)

only 13 left in stock

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only 13 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

PRODUCT DETAILS
Condition:Used
Platform:Playstation Vita
Region:NTSC (N. America)
SKU:VITA_MEIQ_LABYRINTH_DEATH———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Product Type

Platform

PS Vita

ESRB Rating

Teen

Genre

role-playing

Players

1-4

Condition

Used

62 reviews for MeiQ: Labyrinth of Death – PS Vita Game

  1. JF

    Great read. Levy does an awesome job telling the story of the brave men who were foundational in arctic exploration.

  2. Corey Gurney

    Simply put, the only thing that could have made this book any better would have been a happier ending. Amazing read from cover to cover. Levy makes you feel as if you are almost there to witness the entire story play out. 11/10

  3. Hakon Wien

    Well written, incredible story of discoveries and suffering, highly recommended + + +

  4. Ethan Rasmussen

    Great book

  5. Glenn Archer

    Incredible story. The hardships were profound but Americans of the 19th century were a different breed. Very well written.

  6. WGR

    An excellent book and very well written. I first heard about it on the Meat Eater Podcast ( Steve Rinella) episode 197, you should check that out too. All in all, I couldn’t put the book down it’s a great read.

  7. Peter Lang

    Another great story from a master. He has the ability to bring any topic an intimacy that the reader feels he is there.

  8. Rebecca

    Adolphus Greely, 1st Lt. in the U.S. Army, was assigned to take part in the first International Polar Year in 1881. His mission was to set up a camp on Ellesmere Island, just across the channel from Greenland and take meteorological, astronomical, magnetic and other scientific measurements for two years. His expedition consisted of 21 U.S. Army soldiers, one of whom was an imposter, 2 native Greenlanders, and one French doctor/naturalist. Greely had no nautical experience and no arctic experience, but was smart, dutiful, and very dedicated to the importance of his role in arctic exploration. At times the group took up to 500 measurements a day, and even in their most dire straits continued to make notes for as long as they could still hold a pencil. These records, all 1300 pages of them, were presented to the scientific world in 1888, and changed forever our understanding of the Arctic and how other scientific research was to be undertaken in the future. Greely’s expedition had no gentlemen scientists, but instead had dedicated and disciplined men who proved perfectly capable of taking and recording data. Scientific research was no longer the domain of an elitist group. The detailed records are still studied today because of climate change, and allow researchers to compare current data to data from the 1880’s. Because members of the group also kept extensive diaries which included interactions with their fellow explorers, it is clear that Greely understood the necessi.

  9. David Decesare

    An absolutely amazing book about the most heroic journey you’ve never heard of. A tough book to put down!

  10. kt

    Great read about survival against all odds in one of the most inhospitable landscapes. I was almost in tears at the end. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes to read true novels of exploration. I can’t even begin to think how these men survived this, but I love how even in the end they never lost their humanity.

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