Dragon Flyz - L'ennemi de crystal, Le déserteur, L'ascension de Warnado - Book - (REA)

"Crystal Fire" (L'ennemi de crystal) : Gangryn discovers a crystal compound which physically resembles Amber, but expands uncontrollably when exposed to sunlight, which Dreadwing leaves to the Dragonators. When exposed on Airlandis, the compound covers the city and immobilizes its people, until destroyed by electricity.

"The Defector" (Le déserteur) : During the dragonators' patrol, Gangryn is seen fleeing from Dreadwing's minions. The Dragonators rescue him and take him to Airlandis, where the Council offers him safe haven; but Gangryn later betrays to Dreadwing the presence of a portable "crystal reactor", prompting Orac and Z'Neth to arrange the theft of a powerless substitute.

"Warnado Rising" (L'ascension de Warnado) : Modified with lava-powered nuclear engines, Warnado lifts off the surface to challenge Airlandis; but Summit infiltrates it, and destabilizes the engines, which forces Warnado to the ground.


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Dragon Flyz is a 1996-1997 French-American animated television series created by Savin Yeatman-Eiffel and produced by Gaumont Multimédia (later renamed Xilam Animation), in Association with Abrams/Gentile Entertainment. The show, based on a toy line by Galoob, ran for two seasons, in syndication in the US and Europe.

The program centers on a coalition known as the Dragonators (a combination of "dragon" and "aviators"), a set of humans who ride on dragon-back in search-and-rescue operations.

David Perlmutter's Encyclopedia of American Animated Television Shows calls Dragon Flyz "a very transparent ad for a toy line, much like some of the other productions the Abrams/Gentile Studio was involved in at this time (see Happy Ness: The Secret of the Loch and Van-Pires for other examples."


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As a physical object, a book is a stack of usually rectangular pages (made of papyrus, parchment, vellum, or paper) oriented with one edge tied, sewn, or otherwise fixed together and then bound to the flexible spine of a protective cover of heavier, relatively inflexible material. The technical term for this physical arrangement is codex (in the plural, codices). In the history of hand-held physical supports for extended written compositions or records, the codex replaces its immediate predecessor, the scroll. A single sheet in a codex is a leaf, and each side of a leaf is a page.




  

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