La Enciclopedia

#ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

Labyrinth of Amala | Shin Megami Tensei III: Nocturne »

A Labyrinth within the Amala Network that can only be accessed via Terminals. Candelabrum are require to advance through its various floors. These floors are called Kalpas.

The Labyrinth of Amala is a new addition to the Maniacs version of SMT3. It does not contain any Healing Spots (aside from the expensive Dr. Dark and bars that bring you back to the main entrance), contains no Terminals or shops and demons cannot be recruited here (although they can be bought).

Additional Information: "Labyrinth of Amara" in the Japanese version.

Laws | Digital Devil Saga »

Regulations ordained by the Karma Temple that must be obeyed without question. The core laws are: "When a Tribe's leader is defeated, the Tribe must pledge their allegiance to the leader of the conquering Tribe" and "All must seek Nirvana".

Lokapala | Digital Devil Saga 2 »

A resistance group to the Karma Society. They were founded by Fred's father, Greg (aka "Lupa"). Greg died in the real world in order to allow his men to escape.

Additional Information: A sanskrit word meaning "world protector".

In Hinduism and Buddhism, the lokapala were the Guardians of the four directions and were usually placed in pairs at the entrance to tombs. They could call upon the spirits of the next world to help them protect the tomb if necessary.


© Tony

One Response to “La Enciclopedia”

  1. Make sure you study this page Says:

    Make sure you study this page…

    Digital Devil Database

    » The Encyclopedia…

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.


Página Frontal | Mapa del Sitio | D3 Archivos

© Copyright Digital Devil Database 2005-2010. All rights reserved. ™ and © for all products, characters, and indicia related thereto which are contained herein are owned by the companies who market or license those products. This web site is not endorsed, sponsored, nor otherwise affiliated with Atlus. It has been created for the sole purposes of entertainment and knowledge.


Fredric Paul’s article touched off a discussion with some colleagues of mine, who agreed that Google abuses has become careless thanks to its “monopoly” with AdSense by (among other things) callously dropping AdSense participants for alleged click fraud without a reasonable appeals policy. A request for an explanation fell on deaf ears, and my colleague was left with the impression that Google “would have been more likely to work with me,” if it weren’t in such a strong position.
blogs.zdnet.com