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League of Legends logo League of Legends is a multiplayer online battle arena video game developed and published by Riot Games. Announced in October 2008, it was released for Microsoft Windows in Europe and North America as a free-to-play title on October 27, 2009, after six months of beta testing. The game has since been ported to macOS and localized for markets worldwide; by 2012 it was the ...
The soundtrack features 11 songs released on November 21, 2021, through Riot Games' music division. [2] It is preceded by the Imagine Dragons and JID song " Enemy ", released as the lead single from the album on October 28, [ 3 ] [ 4 ] and accompanied with a music video.
In an interview with Rolling Stone, Members of Knife Party stated "Tom (Morello) hit us up when we were in the studio saying he'd always loved the idea of merging his guitar riffs into the electronic world and we bounced some ideas back and forth until we had the final version" and added that Performing this track live as a surprise during their Ultra set was insane.
The song is a duet, featuring the Japanese actress Michiko Namiki and the singer Noboru Kirishima and released in January 1946. It is considered the first hit song in Japan after World War II. [citation needed] "Soyokaze" (そよかぜ, Soft breeze) was released on October 11, 1945, and was the first movie produced after World War II in Japan ...
D4DJ (Dig Delight Direct Drive DJ) is a Japanese music media franchise created by Bushiroad, with original story by Kō Nakamura. Takaaki Kidani is credited as executive producer.
"Warriors" is a song by American pop rock band Imagine Dragons, used by Riot Games for a music video promoting the League of Legends 2014 World Championship. [1] It was also included on the band's second studio album, Smoke + Mirrors (2015). The song was released digitally as a single on September 18, 2014. [2]
An official music video was released on July 25, 2023. Directed by ASAP Rocky and his AWGE collective, [14] it finds Rocky riding through the streets of Kansas City in a massive tank as a marching mob of similarly dressed and masked people surround him, [12] [13] [19] pulling large blow-up statues behind him. [13]
Greatest Hits '78-'90 is Riot's only compilation album, released exclusively by Sony Music Japan in 1993. [2] The collection was also issued as a limited edition Starbox . It contains no material from the Rhett Forrester era, focusing on the Guy Speranza and Tony Moore years only.