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Song Title (English/Korean) [1] Artist Latest appearance Notes Ignition Starts 이그니션 스타츠 BanYa: Pump It Up Prime 2: Ignition Starts is the first PIU Original song, as well as the very first song in Pump It Up series, and one of the handful of PIU original songs that were not revived in Pump It Up Fiesta until its revival in Pump It Up Prime ver. 1.01.0.
BanYa also composes original music including trance, techno, hardcore and ambient breaks. Beginning in Pump It Up NX, former BanYa member Yahpp became a solo artist and in turn his new music became credited to him. Starting in Pump It Up Fiesta, msgoon, another former member, did the same.
Pump It Up (Korean: 펌프 잇 업; RR: Peompeu it eop) is a music video game series developed and published by Andamiro, a South Korean arcade game producer.. The game is similar to Dance Dance Revolution, except that it has five arrow panels as opposed to four, and is typically or mostly played on a dance pad with five arrow panels: the bottom-left, top-left, a center, top-right, and a ...
German musician Daniel Rosenfeld had been making music under the moniker C418 since he was 15 years old, and was influenced by the electronic work of Aphex Twin. [1] From 2007, he became active on online indie game community TIGSource where he met Markus Persson, who was still in the early stages of developing Minecraft. [2]
The music video was partially inspired by the 2002 film, The Ring, [citation needed] and begins with three women putting a videotape containing Pump It Up into a VCR player. Budden then appears on the television screen and eventually walks out of it, when the video cuts to him performing the song to a large crowd in a park.
Pump It Up may refer to: Pump It Up (video game series) Pump It Up, a children's television series "Pump It Up" (Elvis Costello song) "Pump It Up" (Joe Budden song) "Pump It Up!" (Danzel song), remixed in 2019 by British DJ Endor "Pump It Up", a song by MC Hammer
Pump It Up is a British game show for children that was produced by Carlton Television [1] broadcast on CITV from 26 February 1999 to 31 March 2000. Andy Collins was the host [2] and was joined by Julia Bradbury in the first series and Fearne Cotton in the second series. Voiceovers were provided by Richard Webb.
In the Groove, Pump It Up Pro, Pump It Up Infinity: MIT: A rhythm video game and engine that was originally developed as a simulator of Konami's DDR: Stratagus: C++: 1998 Lua: Yes 2D Linux: Bos Wars: GPL-2.0-only: For real-time strategy games Stride: C#: C#: Yes 2D, 3D Windows, Linux, Xbox One, iOS, Android, UWP: MIT: Built in .NET, so it ...