enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The Backrooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Backrooms

    The original Backrooms image posted on 4chan, of a HobbyTown under renovation.. The Backrooms are a fictional location originating from a 2019 4chan thread. One of the best known examples of the liminal space aesthetic, the Backrooms are usually portrayed as an impossibly large extradimensional expanse of empty rooms, accessed by exiting ("no-clipping out of") reality.

  3. Talk:The Backrooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:The_Backrooms

    Prose #6 and #7: Linked wikt entry for its definition "The backstory created around a fictional universe." As text says, some sources say the Backrooms was the beginning of liminal spaces and others only an offshoot, so I changed the caption to say "associated with".

  4. Level Seven (hacker group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_Seven_(hacker_group)

    Thought to have been derived from Dante Alighieri’s novel, The Inferno.The group called themselves Level Seven after the seventh level of hell, the violent.. Contained in some of the group’s web defacements, was the quote: "il livello sette posidare la vostra famiglia", which loosely translated from Italian says, "Level Seven owns your family".

  5. Backrooms (web series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backrooms_(web_series)

    Backrooms, sometimes referred to as Kane Pixels' Backrooms to distinguish it from the urban legend as a whole, is a semi-anthological web series created by American YouTuber and filmmaker Kane Parsons. It is loosely based on the Backrooms urban legend.

  6. Level 7 (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_7_(novel)

    Level 7 is a 1959 science fiction novel by American writer Mordecai Roshwald.It is told from the first-person perspective (a diary) of a modern soldier, X-127, living in the underground military complex Level 7, where he and several hundred others are expected to reside permanently.

  7. Mode 7 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mode_7

    This basic Super NES demo uses Mode 7. Mode 7 is a graphics mode on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System video game console that allows a background layer to be rotated and scaled on a scanline-by-scanline basis to create many different depth effects. [1] It also supports wrapping effects such as translation and reflection. [2]

  8. Control (video game) - Wikipedia

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

    In Control, Jesse will gain various special powers such as the ability to levitate.. Control is played from a third-person perspective. Control is set within the Oldest House, a featureless Brutalist skyscraper in New York City, and the headquarters of the fictional Federal Bureau of Control (FBC), which studies Altered World Events (AWEs) and collects and studies Objects of Power from these AWEs.

  9. Escape room video game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escape_room_video_game

    As the player passes the mouse over the game screen, usually the mouse cursor will change shape (e.g. to a hand or different kind of arrow) if the item under the cursor can be used, opened, manipulated, collected, searched or (if an exit) followed, but some games do not provide such hints to the player.