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  2. Level (video games) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_(video_games)

    Level design or environment design, [7] is a discipline of game development involving the making of video game levels—locales, stages or missions. [8] [9] [10] This is commonly done using a level editor, a game development software designed for building levels; however, some games feature built-in level editing tools.

  3. Ragnarok Online - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragnarok_Online

    Ragnarok Online is divided into a series of maps on two major continents, each of which has its own terrain and native monsters, though many monsters are present in multiple regions. Transportation between maps requires loading the new map and monsters are unable to travel from one map to another unless directly associated with the player such ...

  4. Level Up! Games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_Up!_Games

    That same year, the first Level Up! Live event took place, with championship competitions held for four games: Ragnarok Online, Rose Online, RF Online, and Freestyle. Level Up! continued to publish new games, including Perfect World and Silkroad Online. They also had their first Level Up! School Tour, going as far north as Baguio and south to ...

  5. Ragnarok Online 2: The Gate of the World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ragnarok_Online_2:_The...

    Ragnarok Online 2: The Gate of the World (Korean: 라그나로크 온라인 2: The Gate of the World; alternatively subtitled Epic of the Light) was a massively multiplayer online role-playing game created by Gravity Corp. of South Korea and is the sequel to Ragnarok Online. Most of the game's universe is based on Norse mythology.

  6. Tokyo Ghoul: re Call to Exist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Ghoul:_re_Call_to_Exist

    Tokyo Ghoul: re Call to Exist was met by mixed reviews, ranging from positive to negative, according to the review aggregator Metacritic. [3]The game's physical release sold an estimated 4,500 copies in Japan during its debut week, ranking as the 15th best selling physical video game in Japan during the time period; [4] by its second week on sale, it no longer charted on Famitsu 's weekly top ...

  7. List of Tokyo Ghoul characters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tokyo_Ghoul_characters

    Ken Kaneki (金木 研, Kaneki Ken) Voiced by: Natsuki Hanae [1] [2] (Japanese); Austin Tindle [3] (English) Played by: Masataka Kubota The main protagonist of the story, Ken Kaneki (金木 研, Kaneki Ken) is an seventeen-year-old black haired university freshman that receives an organ transplant from Rize, who was trying to kill him before she was struck by a fallen I-beam and seemingly killed.

  8. List of Tokyo Ghoul chapters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tokyo_Ghoul_chapters

    Three years after the raid of Anteiku, the CCG establishes a new task force composed of humans who passed through ghoul experimentation known as "Quinxes", led by Rank 1 Investigator Haise Sasaki. Tasked to hunt down a dangerous ghoul known as "Torso", the team is forced to confront the S ranked ghoul known as "Serpent" instead.

  9. Genocidal Organ - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genocidal_Organ

    Genocidal Organ (虐殺器官, Gyakusatsu Kikan) is the debut novel of Japanese science fiction writer Project Itoh. It was first published by Hayakawa Publishing in 2007 and later re-printed in 2010 in paperback form. A poll by the yearly SF magazine SF ga yomitai ranked Genocidal Organ as the number one domestic SF novel of the decade. [1]