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Pandemonium! [b] is a 1996 platform video game developed by Toys for Bob and published by Crystal Dynamics for the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, Microsoft Windows, N-Gage, [5] mobile and iOS. [4] Pandemonium! features Fargus, a joker, and Nikki, a sorceress, who unwittingly casts a spell that destroys the town. The goal of the game is to reach the ...
Hyakki Yagyō (百鬼夜行, "Night Parade of One Hundred Demons" [2]), also transliterated Hyakki Yakō, is an idiom in Japanese folklore. Sometimes an orderly procession, other times a riot, it refers to a parade of thousands of supernatural creatures known as oni and yōkai that march through the streets of Japan at night. [3]
Pandemonium (降臨幻術, Kōrin genjutsu) is the sixteenth studio album by Japanese heavy metal band Loudness. It was released in 2001 only in Japan. [ 1 ] All music is credited to Loudness and all lyrics to Niihara.
Pandemonium, a 1971 Japanese film directed by Toshio Matsumoto; Pandemonium, a 1982 American comedy; Pandemonium, Australian horror movie; Pandaemonium, a 2000 UK drama about the poets Coleridge and Wordsworth
Loudness at Wacken Open Air 2022. This is the discography of Loudness, a pioneering Japanese heavy metal band formed in 1981 in Osaka.It consists of 26 studio albums, three EPs, eight live albums, 15 singles and 16 compilation albums, thus making Loudness one of the world's most prolific heavy metal bands.
Gazu Hyakki Yagyō (画図百鬼夜行, "The Illustrated Night Parade of a Hundred Demons" or The Illustrated Demon Horde's Night Parade) is the first book of Japanese artist Toriyama Sekien's famous Gazu Hyakki Yagyō e-hon tetralogy, published in 1776. A version of the tetralogy translated and annotated in English was published in 2016. [1]
Loudness (Japanese: ラウドネス, Hepburn: Raudonesu) is a Japanese heavy metal band formed in 1981 by guitarist Akira Takasaki and drummer Munetaka Higuchi. [1] [2] They were the first Japanese metal act signed to a major label in the United States.
The original Japanese version was licensed and released by Music for Nations in the UK and Roadrunner Records in Europe. Attention by major US labels for the band and the need to make their work accessible to Western audiences, prompted a new release of the album with vocal tracks sung in English on July 1, 1984.