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Genre (s) Rhythm. Mode (s) Single-player, multiplayer. Moero! Nekketsu Rhythm Damashii: Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan 2 [a] is a rhythm video game developed by iNiS and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS handheld video game console. [1] It is the third of three rhythm games developed by iNiS for the DS, and is the sequel to Osu!
osu .ppy .sh. Osu![ a] (stylized as osu!) is a free-to-play rhythm game originally created and self-published by Australian developer Dean Herbert. Inspired by gameplay of the Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan series, it was released for Microsoft Windows on 16 September 2007, with later ports to macOS, Linux, Android and iOS. [citation needed]
Mode (s) Single player, multiplayer. Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan, [a] or Ouendan, is a rhythm video game developed by iNiS and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS handheld game console in 2005, for release only in Japan. Ouendan stars a cheer squad rhythmically cheering for various troubled people, presented in-game in the style of a manga comic.
Akira Toriyama: The World (鳥山明 ザ・ワールド, Toriyama Akira za Wārudo) is an image soundtrack featuring music from three anime film adaptations of works by Akira Toriyama: Dragon Ball Z: Chikyū Marugoto Chōkessen, Pink: Water Bandit, Rain Bandit and Kennosuke-sama. It was released by Columbia Records on July 7, 1990.
Akuma no Ko. " Akuma no Ko " ( Japanese: 悪魔の子, lit. "A Child of Evil")[ a] is the second track created by the Japanese singer Ai Higuchi [ ja] for their fourth album "Saiaku Saiai" (最悪最愛, lit. "Worst Beloved"). Originally released in a shortened version on 10 January 2022 to be used as the seventh ending for the anime Attack on ...
Colors (Flow song) " Colors " (stylised as COLORS) is the eleventh single by Japanese rock band Flow. The A-Side was used as the first opening theme song for Code Geass. It reached #2 on the Oricon charts in its first week and charted for 16 weeks. [2]
The music of the 1996 anime television series Rurouni Kenshin was composed by Noriyuki Asakura. Four soundtrack albums were released. Four soundtrack albums were released. Two Songs albums, containing tracks performed by the Japanese voice actors, were also released.
Hatsune Miku was the first Vocaloid developed by Crypton Future Media after they handled the release of the Yamaha vocal Meiko and Kaito. Miku was intended to be the first of a series of Vocaloids called the " Character Vocal Series " (abbreviated " CV Series "), which included Kagamine Rin/Len and Megurine Luka.