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The game features the original characters from Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan, as well as a new rival cheer group that the player both encounters and plays as. The game was released on May 17, 2007. [7] It has 4-player wireless play, as well as several other new features, most of which were first implemented in Elite Beat Agents. [8]
[7] [10] In osu!mania, a mode based on rhythm game series such as Beatmania [4] and Guitar Hero, [7] the player must press the correct keys on the keyboard when notes reach the bottom of the screen. [7] osu!taiko is based on Taiko no Tatsujin; it involves circles moving from right to left, requiring keypresses when they reach the left side.
Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan is the first rhythm game developed by iNiS for the Nintendo DS, released in 2005. Based on ideas by iNiS founder Keiichi Yano and drawing upon a setlist of J-pop songs, it follows the efforts of a ōendan in Yuhi Town in Tokyo, Japan to use their cheering and dance skills to help people in need throughout the larger city.
Old Salt Union, a newgrass band from Illinois; Operation Straight Up, an evangelical organization that provided Christian-themed entertainment to the United States military; Order of St. Ursula, a branch of Ursulines (Roman Catholic Christian religious order) Osu caste system, a caste system practiced by the Igbo people in West Africa
Iranian king wearing headband A hard plastic headband, or Alice band Baby wearing a headband. A headband or hairband [1] is a clothing accessory worn in the hair or around the forehead, usually to hold hair away from the face or eyes. Headbands generally consist of a loop of elastic material or a horseshoe-shaped piece of flexible plastic or ...
The OSU Alma Mater, "Carry Me Back", was written by W. Homer Maris. Within a vale of western mountains, There's a college we hold dear. Her shady slopes and fountains Oft to me appear. I love to wander on the pathway Down to the Trysting Tree, For there again I see in fancy, Old friends dear to me. [CHORUS] Carry me back to OSU, Back to her ...
The origin of the hachimaki is uncertain, but the most common theory states that they originated as headbands used by samurai, worn underneath the kabuto to protect the wearer from cuts [1] and to absorb sweat. [2] Inspired by samurai, kamikaze pilots in World War II wore hachimaki while flying to their deaths. [3]
Old woman in sunbonnet (c. 1930). Photograph by Doris Ulmann. Cabriolet; Capote – soft crown, rigid brim, nineteenth century; Chip bonnet; Gypsy bonnet – shallow to flat crown, saucer shaped, and worn by tying it on with either a scarf or sash, under the chin, or at the nape of the neck – nineteenth Century; Kiss-me-quick; Leghorn bonnet