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Mike Bithell, the developer behind Thomas Was Alone and Volume, tweeted a prescient question in April, asking followers if they'd be interested in paying $5 for a unique, hour-long video game.
Volume is a stealth and indie game by Mike Bithell Games. It was released for Microsoft Windows , OS X , and PlayStation 4 in August 2015, and the PlayStation Vita in January 2016.
Bamboozle! was a quiz game featured on Channel 4 Teletext in the United Kingdom. It was originally part of Teletext's "Fun & Games" category, though the rest of the category had been discontinued for some years before Bamboozle! ended (due to the general discontinuation of all Teletext news and editorial content in December 2009).
Bamboozle or bamboozled may also refer to: Bamboozle!, a quiz game that was featured on Channel 4 Teletext in the United Kingdom; The Bamboozle, an annual three-day ...
Volume 10 or Volume X or Volume Ten may refer to: Volume 10 (rapper) Volume 10: I Heart Disco, Desert Sessions; Ed Rec Vol. X; Volume 10, album by The Vibrators; See also
Fuel additives in the United States are regulated under section 211 of the Clean Air Act (as amended in January 1995). The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) requires the registration of all fuel additives which are commercially distributed for use in highway motor vehicles in the United States, [8] and may require testing and ban harmful additives.
The original "up to eleven" knobs in the 1984 film This Is Spinal Tap "Up to eleven", also phrased as "these go to eleven", is an idiom from popular culture, coined in the 1984 film This Is Spinal Tap, where guitarist Nigel Tufnel demonstrates a guitar amplifier whose volume knobs are marked from zero to eleven, instead of the usual zero to ten.
When sensorineural hearing loss (damage to the cochlea or in the brain) is present, the perception of loudness is altered. Sounds at low levels (often perceived by those without hearing loss as relatively quiet) are no longer audible to the hearing impaired, but sounds at high levels often are perceived as having the same loudness as they would for an unimpaired listener.