Sean Willmon (born: August 30, 1987 age 32, better known online as Spumwack is an gaming YouTube channel who creates videos mainly on Overwatch. He is also a Toastmasters member living in San Diego, California. Willmon's channel currently focuses on serious and satirical Overwatch content, but does deviate into other games and topics. As of March 2017, his YouTube channel has over 150. Sep 26, 2013 Take all of John Woo's action movies and put them in a game where you fight each other in the source engine and you have Double Action Boogaloo! We shall fly through the air pumping round after.
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:Sequels have a tendency to be burdened with bizarre subtitles or inconsistent naming.This is sometimes to distance it from more conventionally of low quality or an attempt to avoid scaring off potential viewers who might not watch a sequel when they aren't familiar with the original, but just as often seems to be applied at random.A subset of the trope is when later installments drop the affix of earlier installments, commonly creating the illusion that a series is smaller than it really is. The reverse of this is, of course, when earlier installments are retroactively renamed to better fit in with their descendants.Adding multiple subtitles is likely to cause. When it is added in translations, it is called. May overlap with. Combining and can lead to.When a bizarre phrase is the title, see.
For more literal subtitles, see. For awe-inspiring subtitles, see. For odd title changes in an ongoing series, see.See also.:.
The Eyeball Kid miniseries by Eddie Campbell was later subsumed into its spin-off, Bacchus. The miniseries Kev was followed by More Kev, The Magnificent Kevin and, finally, A Man Named Kev. was followed up years later with The Dark Knight Strikes Back Again. The earliest albums went: Tintin in the Land of the Soviets, Tintin in the Congo, Tintin in America. Cigars of the Pharaoh.
From that point on, though, the 'Tintin in Geographic Location' formula was discarded for many years until Tintin in Tibet. 's second book, The Light Fantastic, was originally subtitled 'The Sequel to The Colour of Magic' in its UK print.
As Pratchett became more prolific, it was changed to 'A Sequel to The Colour of Magic' and, later, 'A Novel.' . For a while, they were all subtitled as 'The nth Novel' until the numbers and 'A Novel' was born. Similar to the Discworld example, the books were labelled 'Book n of the Dresden Files' for about the first six books. Since Dead Beat, the seventh installment, they've been 'A novel of the Dresden Files'. has a sequel named. Narrator in has a fun with this trope at one point.
Narrator: Nothing was happening. Still nothing was happening. Another Nothing. The Return Of Nothing. Son Of Nothing.
Nothing Strikes Back. Nothing, Meets The Werewolf. Even numbered books in the series all have 'Honor' in the title. While the consisted of one comic with planned, the book Ciem: Vigilante Centipede plans to have sequels dubbed Nuclear Crisis and Condemnation, which will have similar plots to the canceled Ciem 2 and Ciem 3. It's prequel will still be dubbed The Battle for Gerosha.
named one album Five Iron Frenzy 2: Electric Boogaloo after this trope. It was their fourth full-length studio album, and the only one to be self-titled. The first three LPs released by Led Zeppelin were called simply Led Zeppelin, Led Zeppelin II and Led Zeppelin III.
Their fourth album, which has no title aside from a sequence of unpronounceable symbols, is informally referred to as Led Zeppelin IV in keeping with this pattern. The fourth album is also sometimes called 'Zoso' due to the fourth unpronounceable symbol looking vaguely like that word. Early in their career, had intended to title all their albums simply Franz Ferdinand, and differentiate them only by their cover art. Their producer talked them out of the idea. Their second album, You Could Have It So Much Better, was originally going to be called You Could Have It So Much Better.with Franz Ferdinand, which is. Similarly, currently has three (out of six) self-titled albums. They're identified by the colors of the cover: blue, green, and red.
That's most likely a reference to. 's first four solo albums were all named Peter Gabriel. To avoid insanity, they've since been given nicknames based on their covers: Car, Scratch, Melt, and Security. Gabriel said he wanted each cover to look like the next issue of a magazine (thus the identical /layout on those four LPs). His American label regarded this as a marketing nightmare. As a minor concession, Gabriel agreed to allow a sticker reading 'Security' to appear on the shrinkwrap of the fourth: a disposable title.
The label then unilaterally decided to put the 'title' on the spine, the record's label, etc. (Some reissues have conformed with the artist's original intentions.) BTW how would the title ' Security' correspond to the cover art (a video capture of.)?. released two self-titled albums - one during the years when Peter Green was the frontman, and another during their decidedly more successful Buckingham-Nicks years. The Soviettes subvert the usual practice of bands naming their albums with actual titles, and made LP I, LP II and LP III. Portending at least a six-album career, these Minnesotans strove to create a 'rainbow' of album art. LP I sported a red scheme, LP II featured orange, and LP III was yellow. Theoretically, IV-VI would have been green-, blue- and violet-themed (indigo having been stricken from the spectrum long ago).
In 1985, the World Wrestling Federation held a pay-per-view called. Since then, they've bounced back and forth in number conventions for each year's edition of the show. Each show name, in order:. WWF. WWF 2.
WWF III. WWF IV. WWF V.
WWF VI. WWF VII. WWF VIII. WWF IX. WWF X. WWF XI. WWF XII.
WWF 13. WWF XIV. WWF XV. WWF 2000. WWF X-Seven (pronounced 'Seventeen').
WWF X8 (pronounced 'Eighteen'). WWE XIX. WWE XX.
WWE 21. WWE 22. WWE 23.
WWE XXIV. WWE 25th Anniversary of (aka XXV).
WWE XXVI. WWE XXVII. WWE XXVIII.
WWE XXIX. In 2005, WWE held an Extreme Championship Wrestling reunion event called ECW One Night Stand. The event was held again the next year under the same name as the first show of the newly-relaunched ECW brand. The year after that, WWE decided to drop the ECW-exclusive nature of the event, and it became WWE One Night Stand. Two years later, it was again renamed WWE Extreme Rules. Every year from 2001 to 2006, WWE held an event called 'Vengeance.'
The 2007 edition was called 'Vengeance: Night of Champions,' and for 2008 through 2010, the show was just 'Night of Champions.' To confuse matters further, 2011 saw both 'Night of Champions' and 'Vengeance.' . WCW's event was pretty consistently called 'WCW Roman numeral' aside from WCW 2000 and the next year's WCW Revenge. When WCW ran a motorcycle-themed pay-per-view in 1997 called Hog Wild, they ran afoul of a Harley Davidson group which owned that name. All subsequent editions of the show were called Road Wild. Due to a disagreement between the game's two creators, was split into two games, a stripped-down version also called Dungeons & Dragons, and an expanded version called Advanced Dungeons & Dragons.
This was later revised into Advanced Dungeons & Dragons 2nd Edition, while the second Dungeons & Dragons was still being published in parallel. Then the publisher folded and the rights were bought by Wizards of the Coast, who unified the two lines as Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition. So is this the 3rd edition of Dungeons & Dragons, which incorporated a bunch of concepts from Advanced Dungeons & Dragons? Or is it the 3rd edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons, making it the 4th edition in order (since the original AD&D was a sequel to the original D&D, with the second version of D&D as a ). Then they followed 3rd Edition with a minor rewrite called Dungeons & Dragons 3.5, which was not so much 'confusing' as 'stupid' naming. The current edition has returned to whole numbers, with a very revised rules system released as the 4th Edition.
Meanwhile, former publishing partner Paizo has taken the style of D&D's 3rd Edition and 3.5 rules and slightly revised it into a system they call Pathfinder; the deliberate similarities have earned Pathfinder the nickname 'D&D 3.75', especially among players who disdain the alterations made for 4th Edition D&D. Rolemaster was followed by Rolemaster Standard System, which split the fandom to the point that the publisher re-released the original as Rolemaster Classic, at the same time renaming the Standard System to Rolemaster Fantasy Roleplaying. 's parody of such trends was Dangeresque 2: This Time, It's Not Dangeresque 1. And Dangeresque 3: The Criminal Projective, which was released as part of Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People. Not forgetting the original, which was titled Dangeresque 1: Dangeresque, Too?
And the prequel Dangeresque 0: The Prequel Begins. has a few novels with such titles.
Is a major offender with subtitles Cyberion Strike and its sequel Chemical Siege. However, it helps that the former is the name of the final attack launched by the big bad of the novel while the latter refers to the chemical hollows which pollutes the city of Murio. Both titles are set as a to the main series. gives about both this topic and. Discused in. The sequel to was going to be called The Last Airbender: The Legend of Korra. Not only did it make no sense whatsoever because Korra isn't the last Airbender (she's not even a native airbender), it's a mouthful.
Stranger yet, it was originally going to be called Avatar: The Legend of Korra (which would have made a lot more sense), but they had to change it due to legal issues with. Prior to release, it was shortened down to simply. Happened to in Japan; while had sense, there's no excuse for. They did this very often, spawning no less than fourteen differently named series (not all televised, or even given fiction at all; Operation Combination is a toyline only, for example.) in Japan, though 'only' seven in English-speaking countries. Played for laughs in.
When the family temporarily get filthy rich, they move. Jack wants to call their new home 'Fenton Works 2: This Time, it's Personal'. 's second season was called Total Drama Action (shift to movie-themed challenges on an abandoned film lot) and the third season was named Total Drama World Tour (traveling the world and spoofing musicals). Season four will be titled Total Drama Revenge of the Island (original location, different cast).
is an oddly named of a live show done by a toystore in Japan. Microsoft Windows 7 is an oddly numbered release.
Since Windows 3.x, Microsoft abandoned the numbering system but released more than four iterations of Windows, including Windows 95, NT, 98, 2000, Millennium Edition, XP, Server 2003, Vista before returning to the numbering system with Windows 7. Even if we are selective in which editions we count as actual significant releases, the latest Windows should still be higher than the 7th major release. Windows 95, 98, and ME were all technically the same operating systems.
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98 and ME just being feature added versions (95 = 4.0, 98=4.10, ME = 4.90). Also, NT isn't a single release. NT 4.0 was concurrent with Win95.
Windows 2000 is NT 5.0. XP is NT 5.1. Server 2003 is 5.2. Vista is NT 6.0. Windows 7 is NT 6.1.
None of this is clear from the labelling, as the release names are driven by Marketing and not technical concerns.
If you're willing to wait, I can pretty much guarantee it'll be $5 during Steam's Black Friday sale coming up. And a 'hell yes' for your question.MythPro1Yeah, I was thinking about that. I've been following all the sites and getting my lists ready. I'm mostly looking for things like Crysis 2, MW2, etc. To go on sale(I'm always a generation or two behind since I dont' like spending full price on games), but I may just add this to my list.
I loaded up last year on games from the various sales!Right now, Steam has it for $20 though Amazon and Gamersgate.com both have the download for less than $8, which is pretty good.Sounds like it's a killer(pun?) shooter from what I'm hearing though. Probably different than what I'm used to, though I guess it has a small bit of overlap with Crysis(very small)?Brent.
It's really cool, hell, I might install it again soon if you want to co-op. The SP campaign is short but fun plus there are hundreds of moves so there's definetely a decent amount of replay.EYE is on sale for $10 for the next 5 days. Its a very solid shoot and very different, hardcore and unhandholding.VeryBumpyIt's also unpolished, unoptimized and the interface is awful. A game that complicated should come with a manual, not with some lo-res videos on how to play the game.It's an so-so game but it's far too praised around here, just because there isn't any hand holding doesn't means it's good.A good example of a great game with no hand-holding is X3 Terran Conflict, it's complex but the fantastic manual and tutorial missions at the beginning of the game helps a lot (Even though it didn't take me long to understand it). Unpolished, I'll agree with to a point, but that is in fact a huge part of its quirky charm. UI is outstanding and all game should strive to be as well layed out, informative and efficient. Its the Halflife 2 engine, it runs blazing fast, not sure how you can say at all that its unoptimized.EYE Divine Cybermancy is GOTY for me easily because it is brazen, different and has pure genious underneath its rough outer layer.VeryBumpyIt may be the HL2 engine but it runs very poorly in my rig (It's on my signature), max settings, no AA.
The same thing happens with Vampire: The Masquerade Bloodlines.And no, the interface is clunky, cluttered and it's not informative at all, hell, I found out how to hack properly from the Steam forums and not from the 'tutorials'. EYE is on sale for $10 for the next 5 days. Its a very solid shoot and very different, hardcore and unhandholding. VeryBumpy Which is nothing like Bulletstorm.
EYE an interesting game; Bulletstorm however nails its execution for most of the part, and rests on its set pieces, masochist gameplay and really tight script carrying the game. Completely different brand of shooter, and honestly from what I played of EYE (bought it on release) I enjoyed Bulletstorm far, far more - even if its an unfair comparison based on production costs. And I much rather immersive sims in general, when it comes to game design, then rigidly linear. It's really cool, hell, I might install it again soon if you want to co-op.
The SP campaign is short but fun plus there are hundreds of moves so there's definetely a decent amount of replay.QUOTE='VeryBumpy'EYE is on sale for $10 for the next 5 days. Its a very solid shoot and very different, hardcore and unhandholding.KillerJuan77It's also unpolished, unoptimized and the interface is awful. A game that complicated should come with a manual, not with some lo-res videos on how to play the game.It's an so-so game but it's far too praised around here, just because there isn't any hand holding doesn't means it's good.A good example of a great game with no hand-holding is X3 Terran Conflict, it's complex but the fantastic manual and tutorial missions at the beginning of the game helps a lot (Even though it didn't take me long to understand it). As much as I loved X3: Terran Conflict, I felt the tutorial missions and the main campaign left a lot of useful information out.
Mission objectives would call for raiding enemy ships, or scanning them, but it wouldn't tell you how to do it. I hope Rebirth fixes this. I can't wait, personally.
To me, personally I think Bulletstorm was a good fun game, totally worth it. And by fun, I mean exactly that, it was a fun game throughout. However, if you want to wait till tomorrow, I'm sure EA is going to have a huge sale on it, and I've seen it drop down to as low as $8. Gamerperson33It's currently only $8 at two different places(Amazon and Gamers Gate), which is already a great price.I won't be buying it until I see the EA Origin store sales when they start tonight. Same with Crysis 2. If those two games could be on sale, I'm set.Brent.
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