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Crazy Taxi is a series of racing games developed by Hitmaker and published by Sega. It was first available as an arcade video game in 1999, then released for the Dreamcast console in 2000. It is the third best-selling Dreamcast game in the United States, selling over a million copies. [1]
Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars, a compilation of Crazy Taxi and Crazy Taxi 2, was released in 2007 for the PlayStation Portable. A mobile-exclusive entry to the series, titled Crazy Taxi: City Rush, was released on the iOS and Google Play app stores in 2014. Crazy Taxi and its sequels have also prompted several games which clone its core gameplay.
In mathematics, the nth taxicab number, typically denoted Ta(n) or Taxicab(n), is defined as the smallest integer that can be expressed as a sum of two positive integer cubes in n distinct ways. [1] The most famous taxicab number is 1729 = Ta(2) = 1 3 + 12 3 = 9 3 + 10 3 , also known as the Hardy-Ramanujan number.
For long-time fans of Crazy Taxi and Crazy Taxi 2, comes a brand new game in the series: Crazy Taxi: City Rush. Like its predecessors, Crazy Taxi: City rush turns the player into a driver on a mad ...
Crazy Taxi; Crazy Taxi (video game) Crazy Taxi 2; Crazy Taxi 3: High Roller; Crazy Taxi: Catch a Ride; ... Neo Cab; Night Call (video game) Q. Quarantine (video game) R.
Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars [a] is a 2007 racing video game developed by Sniper Studios and Black Hole Entertainment, and part of the Crazy Taxi series. A compilation of Crazy Taxi (1999) and Crazy Taxi 2 (2001), Black Hole Entertainment ported the original games from the Dreamcast to the PlayStation Portable, while Sniper Studios added a new multiplayer mode.
Crazy Taxi 2 (クレイジータクシー2, Kureijī Takushī 2) is a 2001 racing video game and the second installment of the Crazy Taxi series. It was originally released for the Dreamcast , and was later ported to the PSP as part of Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars in 2007.
And this is when Miranda sardonically introduces the Taxi Cab Theory: “It’s not fate, his light is on—that’s all,” she says. “Men are like cabs; when they’re available, their light ...