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  2. League of Legends: Wild Rift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Legends:_Wild_Rift

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 8 January 2025. Multiplayer online battle arena video game 2020 video game League of Legends: Wild Rift Developer(s) Riot Games Publisher(s) Riot Games Director(s) Andrei "Meddler" van Roon Composer(s) Brendon Williams Series League of Legends Engine Unity Platform(s) Android, iOS, iPadOS Release October ...

  3. League of Legends - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Legends

    Summoner's Rift is the flagship game mode of League of Legends and the most prominent in professional-level play. [8] [9] [10] The mode has a ranked competitive ladder; a matchmaking system determines a player's skill level and generates a starting rank from which they can climb. There are ten tiers; the least skilled are Iron, Bronze, and ...

  4. RoboCup 3D Soccer Simulation League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RoboCup_3D_Soccer...

    The RoboCup 3D Simulated Soccer League allows software agents to control humanoid robots to compete against one another in a realistic simulation of the rules and physics of a game of soccer. The platform strives to reproduce the software programming challenges faced when building real physical robots for this purpose.

  5. Pacific Championship Series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Championship_Series

    Japan followed suit the next year, with the League of Legends Japan League being similarly downgraded and integrated into the PCS. Riot Games announced in 2024 that the League of Legends Championship Pacific (LCP) would replace the PCS as the Asia-Pacific's tier-one league from 2025 onward. The PCS, along with the LJL and VCS, would become the ...

  6. LOL (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LOL_(video_game)

    LOL was developed by a group of five people at Route24. The game was designed by former Skip vice president Kenichi Nishi, best known for directing Giftpia and Chibi-Robo!, and, before these, the similarly-named (but unrelated) L.O.L. Lack of love. LOL was programmed by Fumihiro Kanaya, who worked on two of Skip's bit Generations titles.

  7. Peanut (gamer) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peanut_(gamer)

    The team performed well during the 2024 LCK Spring Split, finishing in 3rd place with a 15–3 record, losing only to Gen.G and T1 with head-to-head scores of 0–2 and 11 respectively. Peanut himself earned 800 Player Of the Game (POG) points, earning him 6th in the overall POG standings.

  8. Hockey League Simulator 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hockey_League_Simulator_2

    [1] The player can switch back and forth between viewing the final scores after playing games, to watching a period-by-period recap of the scoring. [2] The player can replay an entire season in a single sitting. [2] The player can play through each game of the season using either Wayne Gretzky Hockey III or with a quick simulation mode. [3]

  9. L.O.L.: Lack of Love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L.O.L.:_Lack_of_Love

    The four reviewer panel of the Japanese magazine Famitsu gave L.O.L.: Lack of Love scores of 9, 6, 6, and 8 for a total of 29 out of 40. [8] Robert Florence of the Scottish web series Consolevania described the game was "effortlessly one of the best games on the Dreamcast" due to the number of ambitious ideas present and the unique concept that binds these ideas together. [9]