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"One Up" is a song by British rapper and songwriter Central Cee. It was released on 13 October 2022 as the lead single from his EP, No More Leaks. [1] Music video
1Up.com was an American entertainment website that focused on video games.Launched in 2003, 1Up.com provided its own original features, news stories, game reviews, and video interviews, and also featured comprehensive PC-focused content.
A 1-up, or extra life, is a video game item. 1-UP, 1UP, 1Up, or one-up may also refer to: 1Up.com, a defunct video game website; 1UP!, a 2009 album by illScarlett; 1UP (T-Pain album), a 2019 album by T-Pain; 1-Up Studio, a Japanese video game studio formerly known as Brownie Brown; One-upmanship, successively outdoing a competitor; 1Up (film ...
One up or One Up may refer to: One-upmanship, the art or practice of successively outdoing a competitor; 1-up, a video game item that increments the player character's number of lives; One Up (song), 2022 song by British rapper Central Cee
In October 2020, it was announced Elliot Page and Paris Berelc had joined the cast of the film, with Kyle Newman set to direct from a screenplay by Julia Yorks, with BuzzFeed Studios set to produce the film. [3]
The continued rising interest in retrogaming helped Arcade1Up to strong sales, and by May 2020 they had sold their one millionth unit. They also saw a large surge in sales as the COVID-19 pandemic started in March 2020, forcing many people to be quarantined at home and turning to video games as a pastime.
Live at the Half Note: One Down, One Up is a 2005 double CD compilation of two previously unreleased 1965 Friday radio broadcasts – March 26 and May 7 – at the Half Note Club in New York City, featuring John Coltrane with McCoy Tyner, Jimmy Garrison, and Elvin Jones.
1-Up Studio Inc. [a] (stylized as "1-UP STUDIO"), formerly Brownie Brown Inc., [b] is a Japanese video game developer founded on June 30, 2000, in Tokyo, Japan by Shinichi Kameoka and Kouji Tsuda, who worked on the Mana series. The studio developed games for both Nintendo and Square Enix, including Magical Vacation and Sword of Mana.