Ambiorix the Apex

22 of 902
Ambiorix
100% Happy
Owner
furfur
Stolen
25 Jul 2016
Name Origin:
Ambiorix (also known as Ambiorix II) was a French Champion Two-Year-Old Thoroughbred racehorse who became a leading sire. Trained by Charles Semblat and ridden by Roger Poincelet, Ambiorix proved to be a better runner at races around 8-10 furlongs in distance rather than the European Classic distance of 12 furlongs or more. In 1948 Ambiorix made three starts. He finished off the board in his racing debut in the French Prix de Chatou and then easily won the Selsey Stakes at Goodwood Racecourse in England. He followed this with a win in the most important race for two-year-olds in France, the Grand Criterium. His performances earned him the 1948 French Champion Two-Year-Old-Colt honors. Racing at age three in 1949, Ambiorix made four starts. Jockey Poincelet guided the colt to wins in the Prix Lupin at Longchamp Racecourse and the Prix Greffulhe at Saint-Cloud Racecourse, both of which were run at around ten furlongs. Ambiorix then earned seconds to Good Luck in the 1949 Prix du Jockey Club and to Val Drake in the Prix Hocquart.

About Apex Eggs

The composition of this metallic egg is mostly that of an unknown element non-native to Ark. Attaching battery clamps to the antennae protruding at the top of the shell will charge and strengthen the machine within the casing.

About the Apex Creature

Apex are small mechanical creatures designed by Storticai engineers to assist in trickier mining operations. Their razor-sharp clawed feet allow them to easily walk on rocky surfaces regardless of angle or direction, accessing out-of-reach materials with their specialized tail-like appendage.

A modest AI installed in each Apex grant them their own individual personalities and behaviors. This is to provide isolated Storticai miners with another form of companionship while on extended expeditions. On Ark, Apex are invaluable warehouse and retail workers that can very rapidly remove and stock items on shelves with an almost nonexistent error rate.