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Sprite is a clear, lemon-lime flavored soft drink created by the Coca-Cola Company. Sprite comes in multiple flavors, including cranberry, cherry, grape, orange, tropical, ginger, and vanilla. Ice, peach, Berryclear remix, and newer versions of the drinks are artificially sweetened. Sprite was created to compete primarily against 7-Up.
A soft drink brand that is owned by Joja Corporation. Inspired by Coca-Cola. Blue tide: Teardown (video game) 2022: Blue tide is a soft drink that has an addictive secret ingredient that triggers a police investigation. DR>BREENS PRIVATE RESERVE Half-Life 2 (video game) 2004 A drink found in blue, yellow and red cans. Sunset Sarsaparilla
In computer graphics, a sprite is a two-dimensional bitmap that is integrated into a larger scene, most often in a 2D video game. Originally, the term sprite referred to fixed-sized objects composited together, by hardware, with a background. [1] Use of the term has since become more general.
Cool Spot is a 1993 platform game developed by Virgin Games for the Mega Drive/Genesis, Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Master System, Game Gear, Game Boy, Amiga, and MS-DOS. [7] The title character is Cool Spot, a mascot for the soft drink brand 7 Up .
Sierra Mist was a lemon-lime flavored soft drink line introduced by PepsiCo in 1999. By 2003 it was available in all US markets. By 2003 it was available in all US markets. The name is a play on Mountain Dew : "sierra" is the Spanish word for "mountain range" and both mist and dew are composed of water droplets.
Fanta was originally an orange-flavored soft drink that can come in plastic bottles or cans. It has become available in many different flavors now such as grape, peach, grapefruit, apple, pineapple, and strawberry. In 1961, Coca-Cola introduced Sprite, a lemon-lime soft drink, another of the company's bestsellers and its response to 7 Up.
Soft Circle French-Bread, [5] also known simply as French-Bread, is a Japanese video game developer founded in 1995 as Watanabe Production (渡辺製作所, Watanabe Seisakujo), based in Taitō, Tokyo, Japan. [2] Originally a doujin circle, French-Bread became well known for their work in fighting games, particularly the Melty Blood series.
Charles Leiper Grigg was born in 1868 in Prices Branch, Missouri to Charles L. S. Grigg (1822–1883) and Mary Elizabeth Leiper Grigg (1839–1890). At the age of 22, Grigg moved to St. Louis and began working in the advertising field in which he was introduced to the carbonated beverage business through the various agencies he was partnered.