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The subway station has two island platforms located on the third basement ("B3F") level, serving four tracks. Originally the two centre tracks were built since the opening and reserved for the future extension to Sumiyoshi, [1] on which were completed on 1 March 2013 for use by terminating services from Wakoshi from the start of the revised timetable on 16 March 2013. [2]
The aim assist function helps guide a controller player's crosshairs automatically. [3] Contemporary player versus player (PvP) games employ the feature by way of "slowing down crosshair movement when an enemy enters a certain range of the player's crosshair." [2] Games also have been noted to include aim assist as a feature that can be toggled ...
Sumiyoshi Station (住吉駅, Sumiyoshi-eki) is a subway station in Kōtō, Tokyo, Japan, jointly operated by Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation (Toei) and Tokyo Metro. The station numbers are Z-12 for the Tokyo Metro Hanzomon Line and S-13 for the Toei Shinjuku Line .
Shin-toyosu Station (新豊洲駅, Shin-Toyosu-eki) is a railway station on the Yurikamome Line, in Kōtō, Tokyo, Japan. [1] It is numbered "U-15". Station layout
New Transit Yurikamome (新交通ゆりかもめ, Shinkōtsū Yurikamome), formerly the Tokyo Waterfront New Transit Waterfront Line (東京臨海新交通臨海線, Tōkyō Rinkai Shinkōtsū Rinkai-sen), is an automated guideway transit service operated by Yurikamome, Inc., connecting Shimbashi to Toyosu, via the artificial island of Odaiba in Tokyo, Japan, a market in which it competes with ...
Its station number is U-12. [1] Opened on 1 November 1995, the station is located within walking distance of Kokusai-tenjijō Station on the Rinkai Line. The station opened as the line's eastern terminus before the line's extension to Toyosu Station opened in March 2006. [2] However, some services from Shimbashi still terminate at Ariake.
Defunct freight railway bridge Toyosu Center Building Annex and station. In 1937, the area of Toyosu was created on reclaimed land. [8] There were dockyard, power plant, gas plant, freight station, warehouses till the early 1990s. Its proximity to central Tokyo made it valuable real estate, so the redevelopment was robust.
The station opened on 27 March 2006. [1] The station's name means "In Front of the Market" after the upcoming Toyosu Market (豊洲市場, Toyosu-shijō) which was set to replace the Tsukiji fish market. However, numerous delays meant that Toyosu Market did not actually commence operations until 2018, 12 years after the station.