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  2. League of Legends - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Legends

    League of Legends receives regular updates in the form of patches. Although previous games had utilized patches to ensure no one strategy dominated, League of Legends ' patches made keeping pace with the developer's changes a core part of the game. In 2014, Riot standardized their patch cadence to once approximately every two or three weeks.

  3. Mother 3 fan translation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_3_fan_translation

    After a decade of "delays, downgrades, and cancellations", Mother 3 was released in April 2006 for Japanese audiences. It is the Game Boy Advance sequel to the 1995 Super NES video game EarthBound, titled Mother 2 in Japan. [1] The American EarthBound fan community, in support of the series, had rallied support via events and petitions for the ...

  4. Riot Games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riot_Games

    Riot Games, Inc. is an American video game developer, publisher, and esports tournament organizer based in Los Angeles.It was founded in September 2006 by Brandon Beck and Marc Merrill to develop League of Legends and went on to develop several spin-off games and the unrelated first-person shooter game Valorant.

  5. List of League of Legends media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_League_of_Legends...

    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 ...

  6. Curse LLC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curse_LLC

    Curse was a gaming company that managed the video game mod host CurseForge, wiki host Gamepedia, and the Curse Network of gaming community websites.. The company was headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama, and had offices in San Francisco, New York City, Los Angeles, Brighton, and Berlin.

  7. Fan translation of video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fan_translation_of_video_games

    RPGe's translation of Final Fantasy V was one of the early major fan-translated works. Original Japanese is on the left; RPGe's translation is on the right. In video gaming, a fan translation is an unofficial translation of a video game made by fans. The fan translation practice grew with the rise of video game console emulation in the late ...

  8. Andrew Hodgson (translator) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Hodgson_(translator)

    Andrew Hodgson (born 15 January 1994), also known by the online alias Reading Steiner, [3] is a British professional Japanese-to-English translator often working with J-Novel Club and PQube Games. His output encompasses numerous forms of Japanese media, including light novels, manga, video games, and art books.

  9. Moonton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonton

    Moonton removed the game before Google could act and eventually relaunched it as Mobile Legends: Bang Bang on 9 November 2016. [13] [14] [15] In July 2017, Riot Games filed a lawsuit against Moonton over copyright infringement, citing similarities between Magic Rush and Mobile Legends against League of Legends. [16]

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