He shows those things with his approaches to problems. Instead of playing the battle game the same way everyone else does, for instance, he thinks of a new way to do it, and whenever the other people catch up with him and start doing the things his way, he switches it up and tries something new.
Specific examples:
--instead of orienting himself to the door that he came in, he oriented himself (because gravity wasn't an issue) differently towards the goal of the game.
--using frozen teammates as shields
--winning the game by exiting the room and not actually playing
Mazer is Enders teacher during enders game. he trained him to beat the formics. [SPOILER] he made ender think that he was testing him with games when ender was actually fighting in the war. They first met on Eros, the asteriod where Command School was held. In the book Ender In Exile they are companions who are close during the begining of the book before Ender leaves for Colony 1 (later named Shakespeare
No - Ender does not die at the end of "Ender's Game". He survives to go with the first wave of colonists who are heading out to colonize all the worlds previously occupied by the Formics. He suffers death, of a sort, in one of the later books of the Enders quartet.
The enemy's gate is DOWN!
Ender kills Bonzo on page 259 in the book "Ender's Game" by Orson Scott Card.
Ender's Shadow is by Orson Scott Card. It has 448 pages. It is the story of Bean, Ender's friend in Battle School.
ender
In Chapter 7 of "Ender's Game," Ender meets Bean, a small but intelligent and cunning boy who stands out among the other recruits. Bean becomes a significant character in Ender's story and plays a crucial role in Ender's training and development.
In "Ender's Game," Ender's primary teacher is Mazer Rackham, a legendary war hero who trains Ender for his role in the war against the alien Formics. Rackham plays a crucial role in Ender's development as a military leader and strategist.
no connection between ender's game and hitler..... i hope this help ':)
Peters visions and philosophies are about fighting. This is in he book Ender's Game.
In "Ender's Game," Ender is manipulated through deception and psychological pressure by Colonel Graff and the military leaders. They isolate him from his peers, pushing him to excel in battle school, believing he is preparing for simulated war games when in reality he is unknowingly leading a real military strike against an alien race. This manipulation is designed to mold Ender into a ruthless and strategic military leader.
The recommended reading order for the Ender's series books is to start with "Ender's Game," followed by "Speaker for the Dead," "Xenocide," and "Children of the Mind."