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The English title is a play on the slang "WTF", short for 'What The Fuck?', indicating distressing confusion. It was released in Japan on December 22, 2005, and in North America on October 17, 2006 by D3 Publisher. On October 2, 2008, it became available for download from the PlayStation Store.
The Daily WTF (also called Worse Than Failure from February to December 2007) is a humorous blog dedicated to "Curious Perversions in Information Technology".The blog, run by Alex Papadimoulis, "offers living examples of code that invites the exclamation ‘WTF!?'" (What The Fuck!?) [2] and "recounts tales of disastrous development, from project management gone spectacularly bad to ...
ZombsRoyale.io is a battle royale game developed by End Game Interactive. It was released for web browsers in 2018, with iOS and Android ports later that year. A simplified take on the genre, game matches follow up to 100 players who must fight on a large map to be the last survivors.
Doom9 is a website featuring information on digital audio and video manipulation (mostly video) and digital copyrights. [1] It is also the forum username of the author of the page, an Austrian who was a college student at the time of the creation of the site.
In computer science, "IO" or "I/O" is commonly used as an abbreviation for input/output, which makes the .io domain desirable for services that want to be associated with technology. .io domains are often used for open source projects, application programming interfaces ("APIs"), startup companies, browser games, and other online services.
Skibidi Toilet is a machinima web series created by Alexey Gerasimov and released through YouTube videos and shorts on his channel DaFuq!?Boom!.Produced using Source Filmmaker, the series follows a war between human-headed toilets and humanoid characters with electronic devices for heads.
Surviv.io was a browser-based multiplayer online 2D battle royale game created by Justin Kim and Nick Clark. It was released in October 2017 on its website for desktop browsers, [ 1 ] and in October and November 2018 respectively for iOS and Android devices. [ 2 ]
The site was created in 2016, [3] [7] and blocked from Google searches in December 2016. In November 2017, FMovies lost a lawsuit brought by Filipino media and entertainment group ABS-CBN, and was ordered to pay $210,000.