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Singing sand dunes, an example of the phenomenon of singing sand, produce a sound described as roaring, booming, squeaking, or the "Song of Dunes". This is a natural sound phenomenon of up to 105 decibels, lasting as long as several minutes, that occurs in about 35 desert locations around the world. The sound is similar to a loud low-pitch rumble.
From a video game development standpoint, a sandbox game incorporates elements of sandbox design, a range of game systems that encourage free play. [2] Sandbox design can either describe a game or a game mode, with an emphasis on free-form gameplay, relaxed rules, and minimal goals.
"S&M" debuted on the Australian Singles Chart at number 87 on November 29, 2010, upon the release of Loud. [49] When it was released as a single, it returned to the singles chart at number 27 on January 30, 2011. The song peaked at number one on February 13, 2011, for five non-consecutive weeks. [50]
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The song's tune and lyrics were done by Yonezu, with vocals done in Vocaloid, a kind of singing synthesizer software. The theme of the song is a desert planet where life is dying and "no grass will grow for the next millennium", which Yonezu said refers to the dreary, "desert-like atmosphere" of the Japanese video site Niconico at the time of the song compared to when he was first active. [1]
Sonic Speed Simulator [a] is a massively multiplayer online incremental platform game developed and published by Gamefam, under license and in association with Sega of America, [1] and serves as an official entry in the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise on the gaming and game development platform Roblox. The gameplay involves moving around and ...
A user-created sandbox in the video game The Powder Toy. A falling-sand game is a genre of video game and a sub-genre of sandbox games which typically utilize a two-dimensional particle or cellular automaton based game engine to simulate various materials interacting in a sandbox environment.
The format was originally developed for BM98 (a simulator of the game Beatmania by Konami), though the term BMS is now widely used to describe the Beatmania-esque music data system in general. The acronym has been confirmed by Yane to be Be-Music Source in the official BMS format specification.